Outcomes of Patients with Nelson’s Syndrome after Primary Treatment: A Multicenter Study from 13 UK Pituitary Centers

Athanasios Fountas(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Eugénie Lim(St Bartholomew's Hospital), William Drake(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Andrew Powlson(University of Cambridge), Mark Gurnell(University of Cambridge), Niamh Martin(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Khyatisha Seejore(Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust), Robert Murray(Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust), James MacFarlane(Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Rupa Ahluwalia(Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Francesca Swords(Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Muhammad Furqan Ashraf(Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism), Aparna Pal(Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism), Zhuomin Chong(Queen Elizabeth University Hospital), Marie Freel(Queen Elizabeth University Hospital), Tala Balafshan(University of Liverpool), Tejpal Purewal(University of Liverpool), Rowena Speak(Royal Hallamshire Hospital), John Newell‐Price(Royal Hallamshire Hospital), Claire Higham(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Ziad Hussein(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Stephanie E Baldeweg(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Jolyon Dales(Leicester Royal Infirmary), Narendra Reddy(Leicester Royal Infirmary), Miles Levy(Leicester Royal Infirmary), Niki Karavitaki(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust)
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
November 18, 2019
Cited by 39Open Access
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Abstract

CONTEXT: Long-term outcomes of patients with Nelson's syndrome (NS) have been poorly explored, especially in the modern era. OBJECTIVE: To elucidate tumor control rates, effectiveness of various treatments, and markers of prognostic relevance in patients with NS. PATIENTS, DESIGN, AND SETTING: Retrospective cohort study of 68 patients from 13 UK pituitary centers with median imaging follow-up of 13 years (range 1-45) since NS diagnosis. RESULTS: Management of Cushing's disease (CD) prior to NS diagnosis included surgery+adrenalectomy (n = 30; eight patients had 2 and one had 3 pituitary operations), surgery+radiotherapy+adrenalectomy (n = 17; two received >1 courses of irradiation, two had ≥2 pituitary surgeries), radiotherapy+adrenalectomy (n = 2), and adrenalectomy (n = 19). Primary management of NS mainly included surgery, radiotherapy, surgery+radiotherapy, and observation; 10-year tumor progression-free survival was 62% (surgery 80%, radiotherapy 52%, surgery+radiotherapy 81%, observation 51%). Sex, age at CD or NS diagnosis, size of adenoma (micro-/macroadenoma) at CD diagnosis, presence of pituitary tumor on imaging prior adrenalectomy, and mode of NS primary management were not predictors of tumor progression. Mode of management of CD before NS diagnosis was a significant factor predicting progression, with the group treated by surgery+radiotherapy+adrenalectomy for their CD showing the highest risk (hazard ratio 4.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.6-13.5). During follow-up, 3% of patients had malignant transformation with spinal metastases and 4% died of aggressively enlarging tumor. CONCLUSIONS: At 10 years follow-up, 38% of the patients diagnosed with NS showed progression of their corticotroph tumor. Complexity of treatments for the CD prior to NS diagnosis, possibly reflecting corticotroph adenoma aggressiveness, predicts long-term tumor prognosis.


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