Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey

Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate physician attitudes and practices in the management of adult growth hormone deficiency (GHD) following pituitary surgery. Materials and Methods: An online questionnaire survey was sent to a sample group of physicians. Results: A total of 131 responden...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aishah Ekhzaimy, Salem A Beshyah, Khaled M Al-Dahmani, Mussa H AlMalki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2020-10-01
Series:Avicenna Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/ajm.ajm_46_20
id doaj-e2cae1ae2a2240fb938d8302f938a702
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e2cae1ae2a2240fb938d8302f938a7022021-08-04T22:41:58ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsAvicenna Journal of Medicine2231-07702249-44642020-10-01100421522210.4103/ajm.ajm_46_20Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online surveyAishah Ekhzaimy0Salem A Beshyah1Khaled M Al-Dahmani2Mussa H AlMalki3Department of Medicine, Endocrinology Division, King Saud University, King Saud University Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaDepartment of Endocrinology, Mediclinic Airport Road Hospital, Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesDepartment of Medicine, United Arab Emirates University, United Arab EmiratesObesity, Endocrine and Metabolism Centre, King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaObjective: The aim of this study was to evaluate physician attitudes and practices in the management of adult growth hormone deficiency (GHD) following pituitary surgery. Materials and Methods: An online questionnaire survey was sent to a sample group of physicians. Results: A total of 131 respondents provided usable responses. More than three quarters were senior physicians, with most practicing in tertiary care centers (73%). Four-fifths of the respondents see at least 1 to 5 patients with GHD following pituitary surgery per year. Seventy-four percent acknowledge the benefit in principle of growth hormone replacement therapy (GHRT) for patients with GHD after pituitary surgery. Most respondents (84%) would only consider GHRT for symptomatic patients. However, 16% stated that patients with GHD after pituitary surgery generally suffer from the side effects of GHRT. Forty-four percent said that the serum insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) level is the best screening test for assessing GHD after pituitary surgery but 57% of the respondents would use IGF-I levels, and 29% the insulin tolerance test (ITT), in patients with a documented deficiency in three pituitary axes. The main barriers to long-term GHRT use were that it requires injections (67%), and is costly with limited supply (61%). Other reasons not to use GHRT include an absence of GHD symptoms and apparent GHT ineffectiveness (44%), physician lack of familiarity with the medication (40%), and lack of adherence to available guidelines (38%). Conclusion: This survey addressed physician attitudes and practices in recognizing and treating GHD in adult’s post-pituitary surgery. Regional guidelines must be developed to help address/tackle these issues and assist physicians in understanding and treating this condition.http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/ajm.ajm_46_20adult growth hormone deficiencygrowth hormoneinsulin-like growth factor-1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aishah Ekhzaimy
Salem A Beshyah
Khaled M Al-Dahmani
Mussa H AlMalki
spellingShingle Aishah Ekhzaimy
Salem A Beshyah
Khaled M Al-Dahmani
Mussa H AlMalki
Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey
Avicenna Journal of Medicine
adult growth hormone deficiency
growth hormone
insulin-like growth factor-1
author_facet Aishah Ekhzaimy
Salem A Beshyah
Khaled M Al-Dahmani
Mussa H AlMalki
author_sort Aishah Ekhzaimy
title Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey
title_short Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey
title_full Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey
title_fullStr Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey
title_full_unstemmed Physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: Results of an online survey
title_sort physician’ attitudes to growth hormone replacement therapy in adults following pituitary surgery: results of an online survey
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Avicenna Journal of Medicine
issn 2231-0770
2249-4464
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate physician attitudes and practices in the management of adult growth hormone deficiency (GHD) following pituitary surgery. Materials and Methods: An online questionnaire survey was sent to a sample group of physicians. Results: A total of 131 respondents provided usable responses. More than three quarters were senior physicians, with most practicing in tertiary care centers (73%). Four-fifths of the respondents see at least 1 to 5 patients with GHD following pituitary surgery per year. Seventy-four percent acknowledge the benefit in principle of growth hormone replacement therapy (GHRT) for patients with GHD after pituitary surgery. Most respondents (84%) would only consider GHRT for symptomatic patients. However, 16% stated that patients with GHD after pituitary surgery generally suffer from the side effects of GHRT. Forty-four percent said that the serum insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) level is the best screening test for assessing GHD after pituitary surgery but 57% of the respondents would use IGF-I levels, and 29% the insulin tolerance test (ITT), in patients with a documented deficiency in three pituitary axes. The main barriers to long-term GHRT use were that it requires injections (67%), and is costly with limited supply (61%). Other reasons not to use GHRT include an absence of GHD symptoms and apparent GHT ineffectiveness (44%), physician lack of familiarity with the medication (40%), and lack of adherence to available guidelines (38%). Conclusion: This survey addressed physician attitudes and practices in recognizing and treating GHD in adult’s post-pituitary surgery. Regional guidelines must be developed to help address/tackle these issues and assist physicians in understanding and treating this condition.
topic adult growth hormone deficiency
growth hormone
insulin-like growth factor-1
url http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/ajm.ajm_46_20
work_keys_str_mv AT aishahekhzaimy physicianattitudestogrowthhormonereplacementtherapyinadultsfollowingpituitarysurgeryresultsofanonlinesurvey
AT salemabeshyah physicianattitudestogrowthhormonereplacementtherapyinadultsfollowingpituitarysurgeryresultsofanonlinesurvey
AT khaledmaldahmani physicianattitudestogrowthhormonereplacementtherapyinadultsfollowingpituitarysurgeryresultsofanonlinesurvey
AT mussahalmalki physicianattitudestogrowthhormonereplacementtherapyinadultsfollowingpituitarysurgeryresultsofanonlinesurvey
_version_ 1721221725017866240