Abstract
Context: Long-term outcomes of patients with Nelson’s syndrome (NS) have been poorly explored, especially in the modern era. Objective: To elucidate tumor control rates, effectiveness of various treatments, and markers of prognostic relevance in patients with NS. Patients, design, and setting: Retrospective cohort study of 68 patients from 13 UK pituitary centers with median imaging follow-up of 13 years (range 1–45) since NS diagnosis. Results: Management of Cushing’s disease (CD) prior to NS diagnosis included surgery+adrenalectomy (n = 30; eight patients had 2 and one had 3 pituitary operations), surgery+radiotherapy+adrenalectomy (n = 17; two received >1 courses of irradiation, two had ≥2 pituitary surgeries), radiotherapy+adrenalectomy (n = 2), and adrenalectomy (n = 19). Primary management of NS mainly included surgery, radiotherapy, surgery+radiotherapy, and observation; 10-year tumor progression-free survival was 62% (surgery 80%, radiotherapy 52%, surgery+radiotherapy 81%, observation 51%). Sex, age at CD or NS diagnosis, size of adenoma (micro-/macroadenoma) at CD diagnosis, presence of pituitary tumor on imaging prior adrenalectomy, and mode of NS primary management were not predictors of tumor progression. Mode of management of CD before NS diagnosis was a significant factor predicting progression, with the group treated by surgery+radiotherapy+adrenalectomy for their CD showing the highest risk (hazard ratio 4.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.6–13.5). During follow-up, 3% of patients had malignant transformation with spinal metastases and 4% died of aggressively enlarging tumor. Conclusions: At 10 years follow-up, 38% of the patients diagnosed with NS showed progression of their corticotroph tumor. Complexity of treatments for the CD prior to NS diagnosis, possibly reflecting corticotroph adenoma aggressiveness, predicts long-term tumor prognosis.
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Fountas, A., Lim, E. S., Drake, W. M., Powlson, A. S., Gurnell, M., Martin, N. M., … Karavitaki, N. (2020). Outcomes of patients with Nelson’s syndrome after primary treatment: A multicenter study from 13 UK pituitary centers. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 105(5). https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgz200
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