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Sex difference in patients with controlled acromegaly-A multicentre survey. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the differences in growth hormone (GH) levels and clinical features between male and female patients with controlled acromegaly.
  • It involved 84 acromegaly patients post-treatment and found that females had higher fasting GH levels yet similar IGF-I scores compared to males.
  • The findings suggest that, even when the disease is considered controlled, postmenopausal females demonstrate poorer metabolic health and quality of life, highlighting the need to consider sex differences in treatment assessments.

Article Abstract

Objective: Active acromegaly is subject to sex differences in growth hormone (GH) and Insulin like growth factor 1 (IGF-I) patterns as well as clinical features but whether this also pertains to controlled disease is unclear.

Design: In a cross-sectional, multi-centre study, 84 patients with acromegaly (F = 43, M = 41), who were considered controlled after surgery alone (n = 23) or during continued somatostatin receptor ligand (SRL) treatment (n = 61), were examined.

Methods: Serum concentrations of GH, insulin, glucose and free fatty acid (FFA) were measured during an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) together with baseline serum IGF-I and completion of two HR-Qol questionnaires (acromegaly quality of life questionnaire [AcroQol] and Patient-assessed Acromegaly Symptom Questionnaire [PASQ]).

Results: The mean age at the time of the study was 57 (±1.1) years and the majority of females (were postmenopausal. Females had significantly higher fasting GH but comparable IGF-I standard deviation scores (SDS). Using fasting GH < 1.0 µg/L as cut off, disease control was less prevalent in females (F: 56% vs. M: 83%, p = .007) whereas a comparable figure was observed using IGF-I SDS < 2 (F:79% vs. M:76%, p = .71). Compared with males, female patients showed impaired AcroQol physical score (p = .05), higher fasting FFA (p = .03) and insulin concentrations during the OGTT (p = .04).

Conclusion: In patients with acromegaly considered controlled, postmenopausal females exhibited higher GH levels than males despite comparable IGF-I levels, which also translated into impaired metabolic health and well-being. Our findings point to the relevance of including GH measurements in the assessment of disease control and suggest that disease-specific sex differences prevail after treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10083986PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cen.14750DOI Listing

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