1. Prolactinoma in childhood and adolescence—Tumour size at presentation predicts management strategy: Single centre series and a systematic review and meta‐analysis
- Author
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Nicholas Thomas, Tim Hampton, Tony Hulse, Istvan Bodi, Charles Buchanan, Ved Bhushan Arya, Ritika R Kapoor, Michal Ajzensztejn, Simon Aylwin, Jennifer Kalitsi, and Nicolas Kalogirou
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Cabergoline ,Adolescent ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Microprolactinoma ,Pituitary adenoma ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pituitary Neoplasms ,Prolactinoma ,Macroprolactinoma ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Absolute risk reduction ,Multimodal therapy ,medicine.disease ,Prolactin ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Meta-analysis ,Dopamine Agonists ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To report the clinical presentation, management and outcomes of young patients with prolactinomas (20 years) and conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis.Clinical, biochemical and radiological data (1996-2018) were collected from our centre. A systematic review and meta-analysis of published literature (1994-2019) on prolactinoma (age20 years) were conducted. Both random and fixed effects meta-analysis were used to pool outcomes across studies. RESULTS 1 CASE SERIES: Twenty-two patients (14 females) were identified; median age at diagnosis 15.7 years (range 13-19); 12 patients (6 females) had a macroprolactinoma. Seven patients (macroprolactinoma-6) had associated pituitary hormone deficiencies at presentation. Five patients (4 males) underwent surgical resection due to poor response to cabergoline or apoplexy. Patients undergoing surgery had larger tumours (p .02) and higher serum prolactin concentration (p .005). All patients with macroprolactinoma20 mm required surgical intervention. RESULTS 2 SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS: We selected 11 studies according to strict inclusion criteria describing 275 patients. Macroprolactinoma was more common in girls (78.7% [95% CI 70.5-85.9]) than boys and was more frequent than microprolactinoma (56.6% [95% CI 48.4-64.5]). In males, only 6/57 (10.5%) of tumours were microprolactinoma as compared to 102/198 (51.5%) microprolactinoma in females (risk difference -0.460; [95% CI -0.563 to -0.357]; p .001). Surgery was first-line therapy in 18.9% patients, with another 15.4% requiring it as a second line (overall 31.3%).Macroprolactinoma, particularly if20 mm, usually requires multimodal therapy including surgical intervention. While overall prolactinomas in20 years age group are more common in females, the proportion of macroprolactinoma vs microprolactinoma is greater in males, particularly for large invasive tumours. Microprolactinoma is a rare diagnosis in adolescent males.
- Published
- 2020
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