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Endocrine Abstracts (2019) 63 GP173 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.63.GP173

ECE2019 Guided Posters Obesity (1) (11 abstracts)

Excellent tumor response to pasireotide therapy in an aggressive and dopamine-resistant prolactinoma

Eva Coopmans 1 , Sebastiaan van Meyel 1 , Kay Pieterman 1 , Jolique van Ipenburg 1 , Leo Hofland 1 , Esther Donga 2 , Adrian Daly 3 , Albert Beckers 3 , Aart-Jan van der Lely 1 & Sebastian Neggers 1


1Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands; 2Elisabeth TweeSteden Hospital, Tilburg, Netherlands; 3University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.


Background: Prolactinomas are the most frequent secreting pituitary adenomas encountered in the clinical setting. Cabergoline is considered the mainstay medical treatment and transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) is recommended for patients that are medically resistant to dopamine agonist therapy. Resistance to dopamine agonists is commonly defined as failure to normalize prolactin and less than 50% decrease in tumor diameter at a maximal labeled dose of 2.0 mg/week. Pasireotide LAR (PAS-LAR) is a 2nd generation multi-somatostatin receptor (SST) ligand, with particularly high affinity for SST5 receptor.

Case presentation: A 61-year-old woman was referred for evaluation of a dopamine agonist-resistant prolactinoma. In 1993, she presented in a local hospital with only secondary amenorrhea since the age of 25. Her laboratory results showed hyperprolactinemia and her MRI revealed an invasive macro-adenoma in the anterior lobe of the pituitary. In the local hospital the patient received twice TSS and radiosurgery due to regrowth of the tumour with visual field defects on dopamine agonists. She was treated with cabergoline (weekly 3.0 mg), but eventually therapy failed and both hyperprolactinemia and clinically relevant tumor growth occurred again (227.36 ng per milliliter, tumour size 2549 mm3). We tried higher dosages of dopamine agonists (up to weekly 7 mg) as well as in combination with 1st generation SST analogues. This again appeared to be unsuccessful (679.25 ng per milliliter, tumour size 3900 mm3). Before the use of temozolomide, we attempted PAS-LAR in combination with cabergoline to which our patient responded excellently (0.47 ng per milliliter, tumour size 1300 mm3). An important argument supporting to initiate PAS-LAR was the absence of visual field defects, which provided a window of opportunity. Immunohistochemistry showed membranous expression score of IRS 9 for SST2 and IRS 12 for SST5 and strong reactivity for prolactin. PAS-LAR markedly reduced the tumour size from 3900 mm3 before initiation to 1300 mm3 24 months after treatment. Also, it lowered prolactin levels below upper limit of normal (43.9 ng per milliliter) within 2 months of administration to 0.47 ng per milliliter. Furthermore, T2-hyperintense signal and inhomogeneity on T1-signal intensity of the adenoma was observed after PAS-LAR treatment, indicating cystic degeneration/or tumour cell necrosis, which suggests an antitumour effect.

Conclusion: PAS-LAR therapy holds potential in dopamine agonist- and 1st generation SST analogue resistant prolactinomas that express high affinity for SST5. Furthermore, switching to PAS-LAR can be considered in patients with an aggressive tumour as an in between treatment step before starting with Temozolomide.

Volume 63

21st European Congress of Endocrinology

Lyon, France
18 May 2019 - 21 May 2019

European Society of Endocrinology 

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