Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3095327 World Neurosurgery 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundPituitary apoplexy is an infrequent occurrence that can require timely treatment. The term “pituitary apoplexy” as used in the literature describes a heterogeneous spectrum. There is controversy about which subsets require urgent as opposed to elective surgical treatment or even medical treatment alone. We present a retrospective series of 109 consecutive cases of pituitary apoplexy from a single institution from 1992–2012 and develop a comprehensive classification system to analyze outcome.MethodsSurgical and endocrine consult databases were reviewed to analyze patterns of presentation, imaging, treatment, and outcomes.ResultsMost of the patients in this series presented clinically with “classic” pituitary apoplexy (97%), had magnetic resonance imaging for evaluation (99%), underwent transsphenoidal surgery as their primary treatment (93%), and were found to have pituitary adenomas on histopathology (90%). We categorized patients into 5 grades based on clinical presentation. Tumor volume, cavernous sinus involvement, suprasellar extension, and need for ongoing endocrine replacement correlated with grade. Long-term endocrine replacement at follow-up was required in 62%–68% of patients with a higher grade compared with 0–23% of patients with a lower grade. Higher grade patients tended to undergo earlier surgery after symptom onset. Symptoms resolved or improved with treatment in 92%–100% of patients across all grades with good general outcomes for visual deficits and ocular motility problems, validating management decisions overall.ConclusionsWe offer a simple yet comprehensive grading system to classify the clinical spectrum of pituitary apoplexy, which has implications for management, outcomes, and categorization for future studies.

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