Volume 13, Issue 1 pp. 87-88
Case Report

Discovery of a pituitary adenoma following treatment with a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist in a patient with prostate cancer

WALID MASSOUD

WALID MASSOUD

Department of Urology, Lyon-Sud Hospital, Lyon, and

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PHILIPPE PAPAREL

PHILIPPE PAPAREL

Department of Urology, Lyon-Sud Hospital, Lyon, and

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JEAN-GABRIEL LOPEZ

JEAN-GABRIEL LOPEZ

Department of Urology, Lyon-Sud Hospital, Lyon, and

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PAUL PERRIN

PAUL PERRIN

Department of Urology, Lyon-Sud Hospital, Lyon, and

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MICHELE DAUMONT

MICHELE DAUMONT

Department of Endocrinology, Vienne Hospital, Vienne, France

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ALAIN RUFFION

Corresponding Author

ALAIN RUFFION

Department of Urology, Lyon-Sud Hospital, Lyon, and

Alain Ruffion md phd, Service d’Urologie, Bâtiment 3C, Centre Hospitalier Lyon Sud, 69310 Pierre Bénite, France. Email: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 31 January 2006
Citations: 12

Abstract

Abstract We report the case of a T3 prostate cancer in a 70-year-old white man. Hormone therapy represents a prominent branch in the treatment of locally advanced and metastatic prostate cancer. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists have been proven to have a double effect on androgen metabolism: an initially stimulating, followed by an inhibitory, effect on the pituitary gland. This phenomenon may be noxious in the case of gonadotroph adenoma, with subsequent symptoms of intracranial hypertension. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonists (abarelix), by avoiding the flare-up reaction, might be used in such instances.

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