Effects of Pituitary Surgery and High-Dose Cabergoline Therapy on Metabolic Profile in Patients With Prolactinoma Resistant to Conventional Cabergoline Treatment

Author:

Pirchio Rosa,Auriemma Renata S.,Solari Domenico,Arnesi Mauro,Pivonello Claudia,Negri Mariarosaria,de Angelis Cristina,Cavallo Luigi M.,Cappabianca Paolo,Colao Annamaria,Pivonello Rosario

Abstract

ObjectiveControl of prolactin excess is associated with the improvement in gluco-insulinemic and lipid profile. The current study aimed at investigating the effects of pituitary surgery and medical therapy with high dose cabergoline (≥2mg/week) on metabolic profile in patients with prolactinoma resistant to cabergoline conventional doses (<2mg/week).DesignThirty-four patients (22 men, 12 women, aged 33.9 ± 12.5 years) with prolactinoma (4 microadenomas and 30 macroadenomas) were included in the present study. Among them 17 (50%) received pituitary surgery (PS, Group1) and 17 (50%) medical therapy with high dose cabergoline (Group 2).MethodsIn the whole patient cohort, anthropometric (weight, BMI) and biochemical (fasting glucose and insulin, triglycerides, total, HDL and LDL-cholesterol, HOMA-IR, HOMA-β and ISI0) parameters were evaluated before and within 12 months after treatment.ResultsIn Group 1, prolactin (p=0.002), total cholesterol (p=0.012), and triglycerides (p=0.030) significantly decreased after pituitary surgery compared to the baseline. Prolactin significantly correlated with fasting glucose (r=0.056, p=0.025). In Group 2, fasting insulin (p=0.033), HOMA-β (p=0.011) and ISI0 (p=0.011) significantly improved compared to baseline. Postoperative cabergoline dose significantly correlated with Δfasting glucose (r=-0.556, p=0.039) and ΔLDL cholesterol (r=- 0.521, p=0.046), and was the best predictor of ΔLDL cholesterol (r2 = 0.59, p=0.002) in Group 1.ConclusionsThe rapid decrease in PRL levels induced by PS might improve lipid metabolism, whereas HD-CAB might exert a beneficial impact on both insulin secretion and peripheral sensitivity, thus inducing a global metabolic improvement.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

Reference41 articles.

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