Archives of Endocrinology and Metabolism (Jul 2023)

Endoscopic endonasal approach for acromegaly: surgical outcomes using 2018 consensus criteria for remission

  • Rodrigo Alves de Carvalho Cavalcante,
  • Luiz Alves Vieira Netto,
  • Luís Felipe Araújo Peres,
  • Alice Jardim Zaccariotti,
  • Helioenai de Sousa Alencar,
  • Estela Muszkat Jatene,
  • Leandro Azevedo Camargo,
  • Monike Lourenço Dias Rodrigues

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20945/2359-3997000000650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67, no. 6

Abstract

Read online Read online

ABSTRACT Objective: The primary aim is to analyze the endoscopic endonasal surgical results in short-term and two-year follow-ups according to the 11th Acromegaly Consensus statement (2018). Indeed, prognostic factors and complications were analyzed. Subjects and methods: 40 patients who underwent endoscopic endonasal surgery by acromegaly between 2013 to 2020 was analyzed. Patients were considered in remission if an upper limit of normal (ULN) IGF-1 was less than 1.0 at the six-month and two-year follow-ups. Moreover, we assessed the Knosp grade, tumor volumetry, ULN, T2 signal in MRI, reoperation, and complications. Results: The mean age of admission was 46.7 years. Thirty-two patients were in remission after six months of surgery (80%), decreasing to 76.32% at the two-year follow-up. All microadenomas presented remission (n = 6). Regarding the complications, three patients had permanent panhypopituitarism (7.5%); postoperative cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks did not occur in this series. The hyperintense signal on the T2 MRI and a higher tumor volumetry were the single predictor's factors of non-emission in a multivariate regression logistic analysis (p < 0.05). Preoperative hormone levels (GH and IGF-1) were not a prognostic factor for remission. The re-operated patients who presented hypersignal already had a high predictor of clinical-operative failure. Conclusion: The endoscopic endonasal surgery promotes high short-term and two-year remission rates in acromegaly; the tumor's volumetry and the T2 hypersignal were statistically significant prognostic factors in non-remission – the complications presented at similar rates in comparison to the literature. In invasive GH-secreting tumors, we should offer these patients a multi-disciplinary approach to improve acromegalic patients’ remission rates.

Keywords