Litcius/Paper detail

The prevalence of acromegaly is higher than previously reported: Changes over a three‐decade period

Charlotte Aagaard, Amanda S. Christophersen, Susanne Finnerup, Christian Rosendal, Helga Angela Gulisano, Kåre Schmidt Ettrup, Peter Vestergaard, Jesper Karmisholt, Eigil Husted Nielsen, Jakob Dal

2022Clinical Endocrinology33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study time-related changes in the prevalence and patient characteristics of acromegaly, as well as to assess the impact of changes in treatment on disease control. METHODS: A total of 107 patients with acromegaly were identified by healthcare registries and subsequently validated by patient chart review over a three-decade period (1992-2021). A systematic literature review focusing on the incidence and prevalence of acromegaly was performed identifying 31 studies. RESULTS: persons. The age at the first sign of acromegaly and the age at diagnosis significantly increased during the study period, whereas growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor I decreased. Incidentalomas constituted 32% of all cases diagnosed with acromegaly in the last decade. Primary surgery was used in 93% of all cases, and repeated surgery decreased from 24% to 10% during the three decades. The use of first-generation somatostatin analogues (21%-48%) and second-line medical treatment (4%-20%) increased with a concomitant improvement of biochemical disease control (58%-91%). CONCLUSION: The prevalence of acromegaly is higher than previously reported and the clinical presentation has shifted towards a milder phenotype. Modern treatment of acromegaly enables individualized treatment and disease control in the majority of patients.

Topics & Concepts

AcromegalyPeriod (music)Internal medicineEndocrinologyMedicineGrowth hormoneHormoneAcousticsPhysicsPituitary Gland Disorders and TreatmentsAdrenal and Paraganglionic TumorsCerebrovascular and genetic disorders