Prolactinoma: Symptoms, Surgery, Treatment (original) (raw)

What is a prolactinoma?

A prolactinoma is a benign tumor of the pituitary gland. This type of pituitary tumor produces an excessive amount of the hormone prolactin. Prolactin is a natural hormone that supports a woman's normal lactation, which is the secretion of milk by the mammary glands of the breast. Prolactinomas are the most common type of pituitary tumor.

Symptoms of prolactinoma are caused by the pressure of the tumor on surrounding tissues or by excessive release of prolactin from the tumor into the blood (causing a condition known as hyperprolactinemia).

What is the pituitary gland?

Sometimes called the master gland, the pituitary gland plays a critical role in regulating growth and development, metabolism, and reproduction. This gland produces prolactin and several other key hormones including:

Where is the pituitary gland located?

The pituitary gland is located in the middle of the head in a bony box that looks like a saddle and is called the sella turcica. Since the pituitary is in such a tight space, any abnormal growth can result in signs and symptoms secondary to compression of the gland. The nerves for the eyes pass directly above the pituitary gland.

Picture of the Pituitary Gland

Picture of the Pituitary Gland

How common is prolactinoma?

Prolactinoma is the most common type of pituitary tumor. It is also referred to as a lactotroph adenoma. “Adenoma” is a term that refers to benign tumors of glandular tissue. Pituitary tumors are almost always adenomas. They are also referred to as pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNETs). True cancers of the pituitary gland (known as pituitary carcinomas or metastatic PitNETs) are very rare.

There are many kinds of pituitary tumors.

Routine autopsy (postmortem) studies have shown that about a quarter of the U.S. population have small pituitary tumors.

What is the normal function of prolactin?

Prolactin stimulates the breast tissues to enlarge during pregnancy. After delivery of the baby, the mother's prolactin level falls unless she breastfeeds her infant. Each time the baby nurses from the breasts, prolactin levels rise to maintain milk production.

What are the types of prolactinomas?

Prolactinomas, like all pituitary adenomas, are usually classified into 2 groups:

The size may play a role in symptoms caused by local compression and may determine the therapy of choice.

What causes a prolactinoma?

Although research continues to find causes of disordered cell growth, the sources of many pituitary tumors, including prolactinomas, remain unknown.

Most pituitary tumors appear sporadically, meaning that no one else in the family has had a pituitary tumor.

Some patients with prolactinomas have a genetic disorder called multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN1). MEN1 is an inherited condition characterized by a high frequency of peptic ulcer disease and abnormal hormone production from the pancreas, parathyroid, and pituitary glands. Prolactinomas are a characteristic feature of MEN1.

A small number of people have a familial tendency to develop prolactinomas but do not appear to have MEN1. The gene(s) responsible for such cases of prolactinoma has not yet been fully identified.

What are prolactinoma symptoms and signs?

Not all prolactinomas cause symptoms. In particular, very small tumors may go unnoticed unless they are detected during imaging for another condition or by blood tests showing elevated hormone levels.

If symptoms do occur, in women, high blood levels of prolactin usually interfere with ovulation, causing infertility and changing menstruation. In some women, periods may disappear altogether whereas, in others, periods become irregular, or menstrual flow may change noticeably. Women who are not pregnant or nursing may begin producing breast milk. Some women may experience a loss of libido (interest in sex). Intercourse may become painful because of vaginal dryness.

In men, the most common symptom of prolactinoma is impotence. Men have no reliable indicator such as menstruation to signal a problem. Thus, many men delay going to the doctor until they have headaches or vision problems, caused by the enlarged pituitary pressing against the nearby nerves from the eyes. Men may not recognize a gradual loss of sexual function or libido. In fact, only after treatment do some men realize they had a problem with sexual function. As a result of the later presentation, men on average, have larger prolactinomas at their presentation than women.

What other problems are caused by a prolactinoma?

In addition to the hormonal consequences described above, the tumor itself can damage surrounding normal tissue and thereby reduce the function of the pituitary gland (a condition called hypopituitarism).

Enlargement of the pituitary gland can also cause local symptoms, such as headaches (because of increased pressure if the fluid system bathing the brain is blocked or stimulated), or visual disturbances (because of the proximity of the pituitary gland to the optic nerves).

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Aside from a prolactinoma, what else can cause prolactin levels to rise?

In some people, high blood levels of prolactin can be traced to causes other than prolactinoma. Other causes include:

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How is a prolactinoma diagnosed?

Elevations of the prolactin hormone in the body are detected by a blood test. Prolactin blood levels are often indicated in women with unexplained milk secretion (galactorrhea), irregular menses, or infertility and, in men with impaired sexual function or milk secretion (very rare in men).

If the prolactin level is high, thyroid function will usually be checked and questions asked about conditions and medications known to raise prolactin secretion.

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most sensitive test for detecting and measuring prolactinomas. MRI scans may be repeated periodically to assess tumor progression and the effects of therapy. Computer tomography (CT scan) also provides an image of the pituitary, but it is less sensitive than the MRI for the detection of prolactinoma.

In addition to assessing the size of the pituitary tumor on the MRI, doctors also look for damage to surrounding tissues.

What is the treatment for a prolactinoma?

Prolactinomas are usually initially treated with medications.

Surgery is considered if the medications cannot be tolerated, or if they are not effective.

The medical treatment may be only partially successful. In such cases, the medications may be combined with surgery or radiation therapy.

What medications are used to treat prolactinoma?

Because dopamine is the chemical in the brain that normally inhibits prolactin secretion, doctors may treat prolactinomas with drugs that act like dopamine such as bromocriptine or cabergoline. Both bromocriptine and cabergoline have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of hyperprolactinemia (high blood prolactin levels). Treatment with these drugs is successful in shrinking the tumor and returning prolactin levels to normal in approximately 80% of cases, or four out of every five patients.

If side effects develop with a higher dose, the doctor may return to the previous dosage. If a patient's prolactin blood level remains normal for six months, the doctor might consider stopping treatment.

Medical therapy can often shrink a prolactinoma such that surgery is not required.

What are other treatments for prolactinoma?

Both surgery and radiation therapy may be used to treat prolactinomas when the symptoms cannot be controlled or the tumor does not shrink enough with medications. There are different types of radiation therapy and different surgical procedures available. The treatment team will recommend the best option for each affected individual.

Should a prolactinoma be removed?

The surgical treatment of prolactinomas involves delicately opening the brain to remove the tumor in the pituitary gland.

The results of surgery depend a great deal on tumor size and prolactin level as well as the skill and experience of the neurosurgeon. The higher the prolactin level, the lower the chance of normalizing serum prolactin. At best, surgery corrects prolactin levels in 80% of patients whose blood prolactin level is below 250 mg/mL. Even in patients with large tumors that cannot be completely removed, drug therapy may be able to return serum prolactin to the normal range after surgery.

Drug therapy may also be started before surgery to "debulk" the tumor for the surgical procedure. Depending on the size of the tumor and how much of it is removed, studies show that in 20% to 50% of cases, the tumor will return, usually within five years.

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Medically Reviewed on 2/14/2024

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