International Journal of Endocrinology (Jan 2014)

Reevaluation of Acromegalic Patients in Long-Term Remission according to Newly Proposed Consensus Criteria for Control of Disease

  • Elisa Verrua,
  • Emanuele Ferrante,
  • Marcello Filopanti,
  • Elena Malchiodi,
  • Elisa Sala,
  • Claudia Giavoli,
  • Maura Arosio,
  • Andrea Gerardo Lania,
  • Cristina Lucia Ronchi,
  • Giovanna Mantovani,
  • Paolo Beck-Peccoz,
  • Anna Spada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/581594
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014

Abstract

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Acromegaly guidelines updated in 2010 revisited criteria of disease control: if applied, it is likely that a percentage of patients previously considered as cured might present postglucose GH nadir levels not adequately suppressed, with potential implications on management. This study explored GH secretion, as well as hormonal, clinical, neuroradiological, metabolic, and comorbid profile in a cohort of 40 acromegalic patients considered cured on the basis of the previous guidelines after a mean follow-up period of 17.2 years from remission, in order to assess the impact of the current criteria. At the last follow-up visit, in the presence of normal IGF-I concentrations, postglucose GH nadir was over 0.4 μg/L in 11 patients (Group A) and below 0.4 μg/L in 29 patients (Group B); moreover, Group A showed higher basal GH levels than Group B, whereas a significant decline of both GH and postglucose GH nadir levels during the follow-up was observed in Group B only. No differences in other evaluated parameters were found. These results seem to suggest that acromegalic patients considered cured on the basis of previous guidelines do not need a more intensive monitoring than patients who met the current criteria of disease control, supporting instead that the cut-off of 0.4 mcg/L might be too low for the currently used GH assay.