Author:
Kokshoorn Nieke E,Wassenaar Moniek J E,Biermasz Nienke R,Roelfsema Ferdinand,Smit Johannes W A,Romijn Johannes A,Pereira Alberto M
Abstract
ObjectiveTraumatic brain injury (TBI) has emerged as an important cause of hypopituitarism. However, considerable variations in the prevalence of hypopituitarism are reported. These can partly be explained by severity of trauma and timing of hormonal evaluation, but may also be dependent on endocrine tests and criteria used for diagnosis of hypopituitarism.MethodsSystematic review of studies reporting prevalence of hypopituitarism in adults ≥1 year after TBI focusing on used (dynamic) tests and biochemical criteria.ResultsWe included data from 14 studies with a total of 931 patients. There was considerable variation in definition of hypopituitarism. Overall, reported prevalences of severe GH deficiency varied between 2 and 39%. Prevalences were 8–20% using the GHRH–arginine test (cutoff <9 μg/l), 11–39% using the glucagon test (cutoff 1–5 μg/l), 2% using the GHRH test (no cutoff), and 15–18% using the insulin tolerance test (ITT; cutoff <3 μg/l).Overall, the reported prevalence of secondary adrenal insufficiency had a broad range from 0 to 60%. This prevalence was 0–60% with basal cortisol (cutoff <220 or <440 nmol/l), 7–19% using the ACTH test, and 5% with the ITT as first test (cutoff <500 or <550 nmol/l). Secondary hypothyroidism was present in 0–19% (free thyroxine) or 5–15% (thyroid-releasing hormone stimulation). Secondary hypogonadism was present in 0–29%.ConclusionThe reported variations in the prevalence rates of hypopituitarism after TBI are in part caused by differences in definitions, endocrine assessments of hypopituitarism, and confounding factors. These methodological issues prohibit simple generalizations of results of original studies on TBI-associated hypopituitarism in the perspective of meta-analyses or reviews.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
105 articles.
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