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What Are My Treatment Options?

You and your health care professional have 3 main options to choose from when considering the treatment that is right for you:

In most cases, surgery is the therapy of choice for the initial management of acromegaly. If you are not a candidate for surgery, medical treatment is the first-line therapy. The following summarizes key information about each treatment option.

Transsphenoidal Surgery

Surgery is the preferred treatment for most patients. The goal of surgery is to remove the tumor and normalize GH and IGF-1 levels. If successful, hormone control is reestablished. If not, drug therapy may be the next choice.

Healing from Transsphenoidal Hypophysectomy
A patient healing from transsphenoidal hypophysectomy. (The upper lip is held up to show the incision.) In this case, the route to the pituitary was via the bridge above the upper teeth, rather than through the nose.
Beckers A. Pituitary Adenomas. An Interactive Resource for Your Library. Basel: Novartis Pharma AG, 2001.
Surgery Pros Cons
  • Possible cure if tumor removal is complete
  • Possible GH and IGF-1 control, as well as symptom relief, even if resection is incomplete
  • Success depends on size and location of tumor
  • Invasive procedure
  • May cause surgical complications

Medical Therapy

Somatostatin Analogues (SAs)

When surgery fails, the mainstay for medical treatment is a class of drugs known as somatostatin analogues. SAs are similar to somatostatin, a naturally occurring hormone made by the hypothalamus, except that somatostatin analogues remain in the body much longer than somatostatin. They work directly at the site of the pituitary tumor by shutting off the production of hormones that cause the symptoms of acromegaly. They may also be used instead of surgery in patients at risk for complications from anesthesia, patients with heart or lung complications, or patients whose tumors are large but not next to the optic nerve. Long-acting formulations were preferred by a consensus panel of experts for these patients.

Somatostatin Analogue Pros Cons
  • Control of hypersecretion at the site of the tumor where hormone overproduction starts
  • Reduces GH and IGF-1 levels in the majority of patients
  • Improves symptoms
  • Can be administered as once-a-month therapy
  • Long-term safety profile
  • Patients may not tolerate possible side effects
  • Ongoing cost
GH Receptor Antagonist

For select patients, GH receptor antagonists (GHRAs) may be prescribed. These include patients in whom mainstay treatments such as surgery, somatostatin analogues, and dopamine agonists have proven ineffective or poorly tolerated, or those whose IGF-1 levels are extremely high.

GH Receptor Antagonist Pros Cons
  • Reduces IGF-1 levels
  • Improves symptoms
  • No long-term safety experience
  • Does not control GH levels
  • Ongoing cost
  • Patients may not tolerate possible side effects
Dopamine Agonists

Patients also may be prescribed drugs called dopamine agonists. These agents work on dopamine receptors to inhibit GH release from the tumor.

Dopamine Agonist Pros Cons
  • Improves symptoms
  • Tolerable by some patients who cannot tolerate other medical therapies
  • Patients may not tolerate possible side effects
  • Ongoing cost

Radiotherapy

Radiotherapy involves the use of radiation to kill rapidly growing tumor cells. After radiation, tumors typically stop growing and may even begin to shrink; however, elevated hormone levels fall much more slowly. Medical therapy with a somatostatin analogue is often needed to normalize hormone levels and control symptoms before radiation starts to work.

Radiotherapy Pros Cons
  • Reduces GH and IGF-1 levels
  • Relatively few side effects
  • One-time cost
  • Takes a long time to show effectiveness
  • Potential for pituitary and optic nerve damage
  • Risk of secondary malignancy

Controlling the 4 Goals of Acromegaly Treatment

Regardless of which treatment you and your doctor decide on at this time, you should be aware of which of the 4 goals of acromegaly treatment your therapy controls.

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