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Amar Agha, Mark Sherlock, Sinead Brennan, Stephen A. O’Connor, Eoin O’Sullivan, Bairbre Rogers, Clare Faul, Daniel Rawluk, William Tormey, Christopher J. Thompson, Hypothalamic-Pituitary Dysfunction after Irradiation of Nonpituitary Brain Tumors in Adults, The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Volume 90, Issue 12, 1 December 2005, Pages 6355–6360, https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2005-1525
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Context: Hypothalamic-pituitary (HP) dysfunction is common in children treated with cranial radiotherapy (RT) for brain tumors, but there is little known about the risk of HP dysfunction in adults treated with RT for primary nonpituitary brain tumors.
Objective: The objective was to study the frequency of HP dysfunction in adults after RT for nonpituitary brain tumors.
Method: We studied 56 adult patients who received external beam RT for primary nonpituitary brain tumors at time intervals of 12–150 months after RT. The control group consisted of 20 RT-naive patients with primary brain tumors. GH and adrenal axes were assessed using the insulin tolerance test or the glucagon stimulation test. Gonadotroph, thyrotroph, and lactotroph function were assessed using baseline blood measurements. The biological effective dose (BED) to the HP axis was calculated in the RT patients.
Results: Hypopituitarism was present in 41% of patients. The frequency of GH, ACTH, gonadotropin, and TSH deficiencies, and hyperprolactinemia was 32, 21, 27, 9, and 32%, respectively. Any degree of hypopituitarism and GH deficiency was significantly associated with longer time interval from RT and greater BED. However, gonadotropin deficiency and hyperprolactinemia were only related to BED, whereas ACTH deficiency was only significantly associated with the time interval from RT. One RT-naive patient was GH deficient.
Conclusion: Adult patients treated with cranial irradiation for primary nonpituitary brain tumors are at high risk of hypopituitarism, which is time and dose dependent. Long-term surveillance and periodic evaluation are needed. We recommend that adult late effect clinics, similar to those for children, should be established.