open access

Vol 68, No 1 (2017)
Original paper
Submitted: 2015-11-05
Accepted: 2016-04-25
Published online: 2017-03-01
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Thyroid lesions in patients with acromegaly — case-control study and update to the meta-analysis

Kosma Woliński, Adam Stangierski, Edyta Gurgul, Barbara Bromińska, Agata Czarnywojtek, Martha Lodyga, Marek Ruchała
·
Pubmed: 28255974
·
Endokrynol Pol 2017;68(1):2-6.

open access

Vol 68, No 1 (2017)
Original Paper
Submitted: 2015-11-05
Accepted: 2016-04-25
Published online: 2017-03-01

Abstract

Introduction: Acromegaly results from oversecretion of growth hormone and subsequently insulin growth factor-1. According to some authors, the disease can cause increased prevalence of nodular goitre and thyroid cancer (TC). However, the number of studies comparing acromegalic patients with control groups is low. We aimed to assess the prevalence of thyroid lesions in patients with acromegaly in comparison to an age- and sex-matched control group and to update the meta-analysis previously performed in our department by the same authors.

Material and methods: We searched medical documentation of patients with acromegaly treated in our department between 2003 and 2013. The prevalence of thyroid abnormalities was compared with the group of patients with hormonally inactive adrenal incidentalomas. To perform the meta-analytic part of the paper we also searched ten databases to find relevant papers.

Results: Two hundred and five patients with acromegaly and 184 patients with incidentalomas were included. Any thyroid lesions were present in 77.6% of patients with acromegaly vs. 63.0% with incidentalomas (p = 0.002), multinodular goitre — 66.8% vs. 47.8% (p = 0.0002), and TC- 5.4% vs. 2.7% (p = 0.21) respectively. For thyroid lesions the pooled odds ratio (OR) was 3.1 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.8–5.5), and for TCs the OR was 4.5 (95% CI 1.9–10.3).

Conclusions: According to our results thyroid lesions were significantly more common in patients with acromegaly; in case of TC the difference was not significant. The updated meta-analysis showed significantly increased prevalence of both disorders. In conclusion, systematic thyroid examination should be an important part of follow-up in case of acromegalic patients. (Endokrynol Pol 2017; 68 (1): 2–6)

Abstract

Introduction: Acromegaly results from oversecretion of growth hormone and subsequently insulin growth factor-1. According to some authors, the disease can cause increased prevalence of nodular goitre and thyroid cancer (TC). However, the number of studies comparing acromegalic patients with control groups is low. We aimed to assess the prevalence of thyroid lesions in patients with acromegaly in comparison to an age- and sex-matched control group and to update the meta-analysis previously performed in our department by the same authors.

Material and methods: We searched medical documentation of patients with acromegaly treated in our department between 2003 and 2013. The prevalence of thyroid abnormalities was compared with the group of patients with hormonally inactive adrenal incidentalomas. To perform the meta-analytic part of the paper we also searched ten databases to find relevant papers.

Results: Two hundred and five patients with acromegaly and 184 patients with incidentalomas were included. Any thyroid lesions were present in 77.6% of patients with acromegaly vs. 63.0% with incidentalomas (p = 0.002), multinodular goitre — 66.8% vs. 47.8% (p = 0.0002), and TC- 5.4% vs. 2.7% (p = 0.21) respectively. For thyroid lesions the pooled odds ratio (OR) was 3.1 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.8–5.5), and for TCs the OR was 4.5 (95% CI 1.9–10.3).

Conclusions: According to our results thyroid lesions were significantly more common in patients with acromegaly; in case of TC the difference was not significant. The updated meta-analysis showed significantly increased prevalence of both disorders. In conclusion, systematic thyroid examination should be an important part of follow-up in case of acromegalic patients. (Endokrynol Pol 2017; 68 (1): 2–6)

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Keywords

thyroid; thyroid cancer; acromegaly; meta-analysis; pituitary;

About this article
Title

Thyroid lesions in patients with acromegaly — case-control study and update to the meta-analysis

Journal

Endokrynologia Polska

Issue

Vol 68, No 1 (2017)

Article type

Original paper

Pages

2-6

Published online

2017-03-01

Page views

2429

Article views/downloads

2600

DOI

10.5603/EP.2017.0001

Pubmed

28255974

Bibliographic record

Endokrynol Pol 2017;68(1):2-6.

Keywords

thyroid
thyroid cancer
acromegaly
meta-analysis
pituitary

Authors

Kosma Woliński
Adam Stangierski
Edyta Gurgul
Barbara Bromińska
Agata Czarnywojtek
Martha Lodyga
Marek Ruchała

References (17)
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