Synchronous Posterior and Anterior Pituitary Tumors: A Case Report of a Hypothetic Paracrine Relationship.
Publication/Presentation Date
6-1-2023
Abstract
Tumors of the posterior pituitary are a distinct group of low-grade sellar neoplasms. Furthermore, the coexistence with an anterior pituitary tumor is extremely unlikely and could not be a mere coincidence and could be a paracrine relationship. Here, we present a case of 41-year-old woman with Cushing syndrome and two pituitary masses on magnetic resonance imaging. Histologic examination shows two distinct lesions. The first consisted of a pituitary adenoma with intense adrenocorticotropic hormone immunostaining and the second lesion consisted of a proliferation of pituicytes arranged in vague fascicles or pituicytoma. After a narrative review of the literature, we found that synchronous pituitary adenoma and a thyroid transcription factor 1 (TTF-1) pituitary tumor were only reported eight times in the past. These patients included two granular cell tumors and six pituicytomas and all of them coexisted with pituitary adenomas, seven functioning and one nonfunctioning. We analyze the hypothesis of a possible paracrine relationship for this concomitance, but this exceedingly rare situation is still a matter of debate. To the best of our knowledge, our case represents the ninth case of a TTF-1 pituitary tumor coexisting with a pituitary adenoma.
Volume
18
Issue
2
First Page
377
Last Page
382
ISSN
1793-5482
Published In/Presented At
Rubino, F., Eichberg, D. G., Saad, A. G., Komotar, R. J., & Ivan, M. E. (2023). Synchronous Posterior and Anterior Pituitary Tumors: A Case Report of a Hypothetic Paracrine Relationship. Asian journal of neurosurgery, 18(2), 377–382. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-1768601
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
37397038
Department(s)
Fellows and Residents
Document Type
Article