Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0038p151 | Neoplasia, cancer and late effects | SFEBES2015

Pituitary-related outcomes of cranial radiotherapy (cXRT) in adults with gliomas

Kyriakakis Nikolaos , Lynch Julie , Orme Steve M , Gerrard Georgina , Hatfield Paul , Loughrey Carmel , Short Susan C , Murray Robert D

Introduction: Radiation-induced hypopituitarism has been well-described in childhood-onset brain tumour survivors, however in adults has received less attention. The aim of this study was to assess the pituitary-related outcomes following cXRT in adults with extra-sellar gliomas.Methods: We retrospectively collected longitudinal data regarding pituitary-related outcomes from medical records of 59 patients, diagnosed with extra-sellar gliomas in adulthood...

ea0038p156 | Neoplasia, cancer and late effects | SFEBES2015

Adverse metabolic profile in long-term survivors of adult and childhood-onset brain tumours: the role of growth hormone deficiency

Lynch Julie , Kyriakakis Nikolaos , Kumar Satish S , Ajjan Ramzi , Gerrard Georgina , Loughrey Carmel , Glaser Adam , Murray Robert D

Introduction: Childhood-onset brain tumour (CO-BT) survivors demonstrate elevated standardized mortality rates for cardiac disease. Adverse lipid profile and body composition contribute to the increased cardiovascular risk. Little is known about the metabolic changes in long-term survivors of adult-onset brain tumours (AO-BT).Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study to compare cardiovascular risk parameters in CO-BT with AO-BT survivors and healthy ...

ea0037gp.16.05 | Diabetes and obesity–Clinical obesity and cardiovascular | ECE2015

Evaluation of cardiovascular risk factors in long-term survivors of brain tumours who received cranial irradiation

Kyriakakis Nikolaos , Kumar Satish S. , Lynch Julie , Ajjan Ramzi , Glaser Adam , Gerrard Georgina , Loughrey Carmel , Murray Robert D.

Introduction: There is strong evidence that adult survivors of childhood cancer have excess premature vascular morbidity and mortality, the pathophysiological mechanism of which remains unresolved.Methods: We undertook a cross sectional study to assess cardiovascular risk in long-term survivors of brain tumours following cranial irradiation compared with healthy matched controls. The following cardiovascular markers were measured: full lipid profile, fas...

ea0037gp.20.04 | Pituitary – Hypopituitarism | ECE2015

Irradiation-induced hypopituitarism in adult brain tumour survivors: single-centre longitudinal data

Kyriakakis Nikolaos , Lynch Julie , Short Susan C , Hatfield Paul , Loughrey Carmel , Gerrard Georgina , Orme Steve M , Murray Robert D

Introduction: Radiation-induced hypopituitarism is a well-recognized complication of cranial radiotherapy (cXRT) for childhood brain tumours when the hypothalamo–pituitary axis is within the irradiation field. Few data are available for survivors of adult brain tumours who have received cranial irradiation.Methods: We retrospectively reviewed medical records of patients referred to Endocrinology following cXRT for primary non-pituitary brain tumours...

ea0065p282 | Neuroendocrinology | SFEBES2019

Onset of radiation-induced hypopituitarism in pituitary adenomas

Seejore Khyatisha , Tudawe Gireesha , Mansoor Tihami , Lynch Julie M , Orme Stephen M , Phillips Nick , Tyagi Atul , Flatley Michael , Loughrey Carmel , Murray Robert D

Introduction: Radiotherapy (RT) can achieve tumour control rates of over 90% in patients with pituitary adenomas. The commonest toxicity of irradiation is hypopituitarism. The exact incidence is variable and requires long-term intermittent testing for deficiency of all hypothalamic−pituitary axes (HPA). The aim of this study is to determine the time to onset of individual hormonal deficiencies and establish a time frame for endocrine testing during follow-up post-RT....