Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report

Abstract Background Plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are a unique type of pituitary adenomas that secrete two or more pituitary hormones normally associated with separate cell types that have different immunocytochemical and ultrastructural features. Although they represent 10–15% of all pituitary t...

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Main Authors: Ebtesam Allehaibi, Mussa H. AlMalki, Imad Brema
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Journal of Medical Case Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-021-02948-6
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spelling doaj-46761717e84a4dfdb86fc4878e41efc22021-08-01T11:41:57ZengBMCJournal of Medical Case Reports1752-19472021-07-011511610.1186/s13256-021-02948-6Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case reportEbtesam Allehaibi0Mussa H. AlMalki1Imad Brema2Obesity, Endocrine, and Metabolism Center, King Fahad Medical CityObesity, Endocrine, and Metabolism Center, King Fahad Medical CityObesity, Endocrine, and Metabolism Center, King Fahad Medical CityAbstract Background Plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are a unique type of pituitary adenomas that secrete two or more pituitary hormones normally associated with separate cell types that have different immunocytochemical and ultrastructural features. Although they represent 10–15% of all pituitary tumors, only a small fraction of plurihormonal pituitary adenomas clinically secrete multiple hormones. The most common hormone combinations secreted by plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are growth hormone, prolactin, and one or more glycoprotein hormones. The most common hormonal symptom is acromegaly (50%). The aim of this case report is to bring awareness about this rare type of pituitary adenomas and to describe the unique presentation of our patient, even though plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are known mostly as a clinically silent tumors. Case presentation Herein, we describe an unusual case of plurihormonal pituitary adenoma with triple-positive staining for adrenocorticotropic hormone, growth hormone, and prolactin. The patient is a 65-year-old Egyptian woman who presented with mass effect symptoms of the pituitary tumor, which primarily manifested as severe headache and visual field defects. She also presented with some cushingoid features, and further analysis confirmed Cushing’s disease; slightly high prolactin and normal growth hormone levels were observed. She underwent transsphenoidal surgery and has been in remission thus far. Only a few cases have been reported in the literature, but none has exhibited silent acromegaly or mass effect symptoms as the initial presentation. Conclusion This case highlights an unusual plurihormonal pituitary adenoma case with a rare combination of secreted hormones; mass effect symptoms were dominant, as were uncommon visual field defects. Our case further proves that immunohistochemical analyses of all pituitary hormones are needed to ensure correct diagnosis and to alert clinicians to the need for more rigorous follow-up due to the higher morbidity of these patients. Our case report approval number Federal Wide Assurance NIH, USA is FWA00018774 IRB registration number with OHRP/NIH is IRB00010471.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-021-02948-6Plurihormonal pituitary adenomaNonfunctioningSilent pituitary adenomasSilent somatotroph adenomasSilent gonadotrophSilent corticotroph
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ebtesam Allehaibi
Mussa H. AlMalki
Imad Brema
spellingShingle Ebtesam Allehaibi
Mussa H. AlMalki
Imad Brema
Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
Journal of Medical Case Reports
Plurihormonal pituitary adenoma
Nonfunctioning
Silent pituitary adenomas
Silent somatotroph adenomas
Silent gonadotroph
Silent corticotroph
author_facet Ebtesam Allehaibi
Mussa H. AlMalki
Imad Brema
author_sort Ebtesam Allehaibi
title Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
title_short Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
title_full Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
title_fullStr Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
title_full_unstemmed Plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
title_sort plurihormonal pituitary macroadenoma:  a case report
publisher BMC
series Journal of Medical Case Reports
issn 1752-1947
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background Plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are a unique type of pituitary adenomas that secrete two or more pituitary hormones normally associated with separate cell types that have different immunocytochemical and ultrastructural features. Although they represent 10–15% of all pituitary tumors, only a small fraction of plurihormonal pituitary adenomas clinically secrete multiple hormones. The most common hormone combinations secreted by plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are growth hormone, prolactin, and one or more glycoprotein hormones. The most common hormonal symptom is acromegaly (50%). The aim of this case report is to bring awareness about this rare type of pituitary adenomas and to describe the unique presentation of our patient, even though plurihormonal pituitary adenomas are known mostly as a clinically silent tumors. Case presentation Herein, we describe an unusual case of plurihormonal pituitary adenoma with triple-positive staining for adrenocorticotropic hormone, growth hormone, and prolactin. The patient is a 65-year-old Egyptian woman who presented with mass effect symptoms of the pituitary tumor, which primarily manifested as severe headache and visual field defects. She also presented with some cushingoid features, and further analysis confirmed Cushing’s disease; slightly high prolactin and normal growth hormone levels were observed. She underwent transsphenoidal surgery and has been in remission thus far. Only a few cases have been reported in the literature, but none has exhibited silent acromegaly or mass effect symptoms as the initial presentation. Conclusion This case highlights an unusual plurihormonal pituitary adenoma case with a rare combination of secreted hormones; mass effect symptoms were dominant, as were uncommon visual field defects. Our case further proves that immunohistochemical analyses of all pituitary hormones are needed to ensure correct diagnosis and to alert clinicians to the need for more rigorous follow-up due to the higher morbidity of these patients. Our case report approval number Federal Wide Assurance NIH, USA is FWA00018774 IRB registration number with OHRP/NIH is IRB00010471.
topic Plurihormonal pituitary adenoma
Nonfunctioning
Silent pituitary adenomas
Silent somatotroph adenomas
Silent gonadotroph
Silent corticotroph
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-021-02948-6
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AT mussahalmalki plurihormonalpituitarymacroadenomaacasereport
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