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Clinical indicators of biochemical remission in acromegaly: does incomplete disease control always mean therapeutic failure?

Identifieur interne : 001520 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 001519; suivant : 001521

Clinical indicators of biochemical remission in acromegaly: does incomplete disease control always mean therapeutic failure?

Auteurs : Svetozar S. Damjanovic ; Aleksandar N. Neskovic ; Milan S. Petakov ; Vera Popovic ; Djuro Macut ; Pavle Vukojevic ; Miloje M. Joksimovic [Serbie]

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RBID : ISTEX:E817EC29A3FBD2892147ADCB553BF4DB949B0478

Abstract

Objective  Correction of GH and IGF‐I levels are associated with improvements in insulin secretion, cardiac performance and body composition in patients with acromegaly, but whether these parallel post‐treatment levels of GH–IGF‐I axis activity is undefined. We investigate whether various biochemical outcomes after transsphenoidal pituitary surgery (TSS) in these patients are associated with clinically relevant differences in cardiac performance, insulin resistance and body composition. Design  Cross‐sectional study of consecutive patients with acromegaly admitted to the hospital between 2001 and 2002. Patients and methods  Forty‐one patients after TSS for somatotroph pituitary adenoma and 23 patients with naive acromegaly serving as positive controls were enrolled in the study. Mean daily GH levels (mGH), IGF‐I, leptin and lipid levels, glucose, insulin and GH concentrations during oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT) were measured in all study participants. Insulin resistance was measured by homeostatic model index (RHOMA). Body composition was assessed by dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry. Left ventricular mass index (LVMi) and cardiac index (Ci) were determined by echocardiography. Results  We found no difference in cardiac indices, insulin resistance, body composition and leptin levels between patients with complete biochemical remission and those with inadequately controlled disease (P > 0·05 for all) after TSS. Cured patients had lower values (mean ± SD) of cardiac index (2·2 ± 0·7 vs. 3·0 ± 1·0 l/min/m2; P = 0·04) compared with naive patients. A similar decrease in LVMi was observed in controlled (108·4 ± 30·0 g/m2; P = 0·015) and inadequately controlled disease (108·8 ± 30·7 g/m2; P = 0·03) in comparison with naive disease (160·3 ± 80·6 g/m2). Insulin resistance and leptin changed in opposite ways. In controlled and inadequately controlled disease, RHOMA index was lower (2·2 ± 1·4; P = 0·001 and 3·1 ± 2·0; P = 0·05 vs. 5·1 ± 3·1) while leptin concentration was higher (14·9 ± 8·7 µg/l, P = 0·004 and 12·8 ± 7·8 µg/l, P = 0·05 vs. 7·4 ± 3·8 µg/l) than in naive disease. In all patients, leptin correlated negatively with cardiac index (r = −0·46; P = 0·001) and IGF‐I levels (r = −0·45; P < 0·001). Independent predictors of biochemical remission, based on normal IGF‐I levels only, were cardiac [P = 0·04, odds ratio (OR) 0·4; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0·2–0·9] and RHOMA index (P = 0·009, OR 0·6; 95% CI 0·4–0·8). Similar results were obtained if the definition of cure included both normal IGF‐I levels and the ability to achieve GH nadir < 1 µg/l during oGTT. Insulin resistance (P = 0·02, OR 0·6; 95% CI 0·4–0·9) and leptin level (P = 0·002, OR 1·3; 95% CI 1·1–1·6) were independent predictors of normalized mGH values. Conclusion  This study shows that cardiac indices, insulin resistance and body composition were not different between patients with complete biochemical remission and those with discordant GH and IGF‐I levels. It appears that even incomplete disease control after TSS can result in improvement of these clinical markers.

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DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2265.2005.02233.x


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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Objective  Correction of GH and IGF‐I levels are associated with improvements in insulin secretion, cardiac performance and body composition in patients with acromegaly, but whether these parallel post‐treatment levels of GH–IGF‐I axis activity is undefined. We investigate whether various biochemical outcomes after transsphenoidal pituitary surgery (TSS) in these patients are associated with clinically relevant differences in cardiac performance, insulin resistance and body composition. Design  Cross‐sectional study of consecutive patients with acromegaly admitted to the hospital between 2001 and 2002. Patients and methods  Forty‐one patients after TSS for somatotroph pituitary adenoma and 23 patients with naive acromegaly serving as positive controls were enrolled in the study. Mean daily GH levels (mGH), IGF‐I, leptin and lipid levels, glucose, insulin and GH concentrations during oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT) were measured in all study participants. Insulin resistance was measured by homeostatic model index (RHOMA). Body composition was assessed by dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry. Left ventricular mass index (LVMi) and cardiac index (Ci) were determined by echocardiography. Results  We found no difference in cardiac indices, insulin resistance, body composition and leptin levels between patients with complete biochemical remission and those with inadequately controlled disease (P > 0·05 for all) after TSS. Cured patients had lower values (mean ± SD) of cardiac index (2·2 ± 0·7 vs. 3·0 ± 1·0 l/min/m2; P = 0·04) compared with naive patients. A similar decrease in LVMi was observed in controlled (108·4 ± 30·0 g/m2; P = 0·015) and inadequately controlled disease (108·8 ± 30·7 g/m2; P = 0·03) in comparison with naive disease (160·3 ± 80·6 g/m2). Insulin resistance and leptin changed in opposite ways. In controlled and inadequately controlled disease, RHOMA index was lower (2·2 ± 1·4; P = 0·001 and 3·1 ± 2·0; P = 0·05 vs. 5·1 ± 3·1) while leptin concentration was higher (14·9 ± 8·7 µg/l, P = 0·004 and 12·8 ± 7·8 µg/l, P = 0·05 vs. 7·4 ± 3·8 µg/l) than in naive disease. In all patients, leptin correlated negatively with cardiac index (r = −0·46; P = 0·001) and IGF‐I levels (r = −0·45; P < 0·001). Independent predictors of biochemical remission, based on normal IGF‐I levels only, were cardiac [P = 0·04, odds ratio (OR) 0·4; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0·2–0·9] and RHOMA index (P = 0·009, OR 0·6; 95% CI 0·4–0·8). Similar results were obtained if the definition of cure included both normal IGF‐I levels and the ability to achieve GH nadir < 1 µg/l during oGTT. Insulin resistance (P = 0·02, OR 0·6; 95% CI 0·4–0·9) and leptin level (P = 0·002, OR 1·3; 95% CI 1·1–1·6) were independent predictors of normalized mGH values. Conclusion  This study shows that cardiac indices, insulin resistance and body composition were not different between patients with complete biochemical remission and those with discordant GH and IGF‐I levels. It appears that even incomplete disease control after TSS can result in improvement of these clinical markers.</div>
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