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Lookup NU author(s): Dr Chankramath Arun, Dr Stephen Ball, Jonathan Hill, Janet Lewis, Dr Richard Quinton
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Introduction True resistance to cabergoline in patients with hyperprolactinaemia has only rarely been reported. We describe a patient with macroprolactinoma who initially responded to cabergoline, but then developed a progressive increase in PRL levels. Clinical case A 78-year-old male presenting with headache and left temporal hemianopia was found to have a macroprolactinoma with suprasellar/cavernous sinus extension and panhypopituitarism. The biochemistry dataset revealed central hypothyroidism dating back >5 years. On cabergoline 3.5 mg/wk, PRL fell progressively from 51,299 to 4,833 mU/L over a 7-month period with some tumour shrinkage. However, 14 months after initiation of medical therapy, PRL had risen again to 13,597 with evidence of tumour regrowth, despite a stepwise increase in cabergoline dose to 7 mg/wk. There was little response to octreotide challenge (12,998→8,466) and PRL rose further to 22,227 over the next month. Transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) was limited by severe vascular disease (circle of Willis fed by a single hypertrophic vertebral artery). Histology confirmed lactotroph adenoma with unusually high mitotic index. Post-op PRL was 13,597 and adjuvant fractionated multiportal EBRT was administered, resulting in a nadir PRL 17-months later of 1,665. However, despite cabergoline 10 mg/wk, there has since been tumour regrowth and further rise in PRL, peaking 3-years post TSS/EBRT at 19,606. Discussion It is unusual to develop resistance to cabergoline in patients who are initially sensitive. Due to physical frailty and tumour anatomy, he is not a candidate for further TSS or stereotaxic radiosurgery. Tablet non-adherence is a theoretical possibility, but following periods of supervised twice-weekly administration, we are confident this is not the case. Tachyphylaxis (documented in one previous case) is also a possibility and this could potentially be established by withholding cabergoline for 1–3 months and then rechallenging. Finally, tumour growth might be E2-driven, in which case a trial of aromatase inhibitor±stopping androgen replacement might be beneficial.
Author(s): Arun CS, Mitra D, Ball SG, Hill J, Lewis J, Quinton R
Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)
Publication status: Published
Conference Name: Endocrine Abstracts: 197th Meeting of the Society for Endocrinology
Year of Conference: 2006
Pages: OC21
ISSN: 1470-3947
Publisher: BioScientifica Ltd.
URL: http://www.endocrine-abstracts.org/scripts/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getdoc&DocId=83&Index=E%3a%5cdtIndex%5cENDOABS&HitCount=4&hits=194+1bd+1be+1ce+&SearchForm=d%3a%5cendoabs%5csearch%5csearch%2ehtm
Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item
ISBN: 14796848