Pathological characteristics of reoperated regrowing clinically nonfunctioning pituitary tumor cases in comparison with initial surgical cases
Atsushi Ishida, Naoko Inoshita, Noriaki Tanabe, Koji Takano, Sachiko Tanaka-Mizuno, Masataka Kato, Haruko Yoshimoto, Hideki Shiramizu, Go Matsuoka, Shozo Yamada

TL;DR
This study compares the characteristics of pituitary tumors that regrow after surgery with those from initial surgeries, finding differences in hormone and transcription factor expression.
Contribution
The study identifies higher rates of hormone-negative but transcription factor–positive tumors in regrown pituitary tumors compared to initial cases.
Findings
Immunonegativity for adenohypophyseal hormones is more common in reoperation cases than initial surgeries.
The rate of H-/TF+ tumors among silent gonadotroph tumors is significantly higher in regrown tumors.
PR cases tend to regrow more quickly despite having lower Ki-67 LI than GTR cases.
Abstract
Postoperative nonfunctioning pituitary tumor (NFPT) regrowth is a significant concern, but its predictive factors are not well established. This study aimed to elucidate the pathological characteristics of NFPTs indicated for reoperation for tumor regrowth. Pathological, radiological, and clinical data were collected from patients who underwent repeat operation for NFPT at Moriyama Memorial Hospital (MMH) between April 2018 and September 2023. For comparison, we also gathered data from patients who underwent initial surgery for NFPT during the same period at MMH. Overall, 61 and 244 NFPT patients who respectively underwent reoperation and initial operation were evaluated. The mean period between the previous operation and reoperation was 113 months. Immunonegativity for any adenohypophyseal hormone was significantly more frequent in the reoperation group than in the initial operation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPituitary Gland Disorders and Treatments · Adrenal and Paraganglionic Tumors · Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment
