Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma

Background: Pituitary adenomas are benign neoplasms representing 10 to 15% of intracranial lesions. Giant pituitary adenomas describe tumors more than 4 cm in maximum diameter and represent 6-10% of pituitary tumors. The introduction oftruly ‘extended endonasal’ approaches has enabled thepituitary s...

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Main Authors: Abdulrahman Alrefaey Aldengawy, Ahmed Mohamed Taha, Mostafa Alsayed Mohamed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Egyptian knowledge bank 2021-04-01
Series:International Journal of Medical Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/article_157405_a4eb22e0214bc24610e5c8a10f4df400.pdf
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spelling doaj-e8aa96548b2447b8a57e2eac06ee562c2021-05-15T15:45:15ZengEgyptian knowledge bankInternational Journal of Medical Arts2636-41742682-37802021-04-01321288129810.21608/ijma.2021.62003.1272157405Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary AdenomaAbdulrahman Alrefaey Aldengawy0Ahmed Mohamed Taha1Mostafa Alsayed Mohamed2Department of Neurosurgery, Damietta Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, EgyptDepartment of Neurosugery, Damietta Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, EgyptDepartment of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, EgyptBackground: Pituitary adenomas are benign neoplasms representing 10 to 15% of intracranial lesions. Giant pituitary adenomas describe tumors more than 4 cm in maximum diameter and represent 6-10% of pituitary tumors. The introduction oftruly ‘extended endonasal’ approaches has enabled thepituitary surgeon to achieve a more radical resection safely. The aim of the work: Evaluation of efficacy of the endoscopic endonasal approach in managing giant pituitary adenoma. Patients and methods: Fifteenpatients with giant pituitary adenomas were enrolled. They were submitted to full clinical examination, radiological, visual, and hormonal assessment in the pre and postoperative period. A purely endoscopic endonasal approach was used as the primary surgical management for all the patients. The collected data included preoperative data, tumor characteristics, resection rate, clinical outcome, recurrence rate, and need for adjuvant radiotherapy Results: The mean age was 40.7 [range 16-57] years, with a male predominance [60%]. Visual affection was reported in [86.6%] with pituitary hormonal hypersecretion in 53.3%. There was an improvement in 80% of patients with visual field defects and 83.3% of patients with diminished visual acuity. Prolactin hormone levels normalized in 40%, while growth hormone normalized in 33.3%. Follow-up MRI revealed gross total resection [GTR] in 41.6% of patients with suprasellar extension, subtotal removal [about 80% of the tumor] in 50% of patients, partial tumor resection in one patient [8.4%].  In para-sellar extension, subtotal resection achieved [in 66.6%], and partial resection in 33.3%. Postoperative CSF leak occurred in 13.3% due to uncomplete reconstruction of the sella. They were reoperated for sella repair and augmentation. Three patients [20%] had transient [for 3 weeks] postoperative diabetes insipidus [DI] in the early postoperative period. Conclusion: Endoscopic endonasal approach is an effective and safe approach for managing giant pituitary adenomas.https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/article_157405_a4eb22e0214bc24610e5c8a10f4df400.pdfpituitarygianttranssphenoidalendonasalendoscopic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdulrahman Alrefaey Aldengawy
Ahmed Mohamed Taha
Mostafa Alsayed Mohamed
spellingShingle Abdulrahman Alrefaey Aldengawy
Ahmed Mohamed Taha
Mostafa Alsayed Mohamed
Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma
International Journal of Medical Arts
pituitary
giant
transsphenoidal
endonasal
endoscopic
author_facet Abdulrahman Alrefaey Aldengawy
Ahmed Mohamed Taha
Mostafa Alsayed Mohamed
author_sort Abdulrahman Alrefaey Aldengawy
title Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma
title_short Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma
title_full Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma
title_fullStr Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma
title_full_unstemmed Surgical Outcome of Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Giant Pituitary Adenoma
title_sort surgical outcome of endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery for giant pituitary adenoma
publisher Egyptian knowledge bank
series International Journal of Medical Arts
issn 2636-4174
2682-3780
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Background: Pituitary adenomas are benign neoplasms representing 10 to 15% of intracranial lesions. Giant pituitary adenomas describe tumors more than 4 cm in maximum diameter and represent 6-10% of pituitary tumors. The introduction oftruly ‘extended endonasal’ approaches has enabled thepituitary surgeon to achieve a more radical resection safely. The aim of the work: Evaluation of efficacy of the endoscopic endonasal approach in managing giant pituitary adenoma. Patients and methods: Fifteenpatients with giant pituitary adenomas were enrolled. They were submitted to full clinical examination, radiological, visual, and hormonal assessment in the pre and postoperative period. A purely endoscopic endonasal approach was used as the primary surgical management for all the patients. The collected data included preoperative data, tumor characteristics, resection rate, clinical outcome, recurrence rate, and need for adjuvant radiotherapy Results: The mean age was 40.7 [range 16-57] years, with a male predominance [60%]. Visual affection was reported in [86.6%] with pituitary hormonal hypersecretion in 53.3%. There was an improvement in 80% of patients with visual field defects and 83.3% of patients with diminished visual acuity. Prolactin hormone levels normalized in 40%, while growth hormone normalized in 33.3%. Follow-up MRI revealed gross total resection [GTR] in 41.6% of patients with suprasellar extension, subtotal removal [about 80% of the tumor] in 50% of patients, partial tumor resection in one patient [8.4%].  In para-sellar extension, subtotal resection achieved [in 66.6%], and partial resection in 33.3%. Postoperative CSF leak occurred in 13.3% due to uncomplete reconstruction of the sella. They were reoperated for sella repair and augmentation. Three patients [20%] had transient [for 3 weeks] postoperative diabetes insipidus [DI] in the early postoperative period. Conclusion: Endoscopic endonasal approach is an effective and safe approach for managing giant pituitary adenomas.
topic pituitary
giant
transsphenoidal
endonasal
endoscopic
url https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/article_157405_a4eb22e0214bc24610e5c8a10f4df400.pdf
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