Journal of the Endocrine Society Journal Article

Long-Term Outcome of Surgical Treatment of Acromegaly

May 23, 2023
 

Adriana P Kuker, Wei Shen, Zhezhen Jin, Jun Chen, Jeffrey N Bruce, Pamela U Freda
Journal of the Endocrine Society, Volume 7, Issue 5, May 2023, bvad028
https://doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad028

Abstract

Context

Acromegaly presents a unique pattern of lower adiposity and insulin resistance in active disease but reduction in insulin resistance despite a rise in adiposity after surgery. Depot-specific adipose tissue masses and ectopic lipid are important predictors of insulin resistance in other populations, but whether they are in acromegaly is unknown. Long-term persistence of body composition changes after surgery is unknown.

Objective

To determine how depot-specific body composition and ectopic lipid relate to insulin resistance in active acromegaly and whether their changes with surgery are sustained long-term.

Methods

Cross-sectional study in patients with active acromegaly and longitudinal study in newly diagnosed patients studied before and in long-term follow-up, 3 (1–8) years (median, range), after surgery. Seventy-one patients with active acromegaly studied cross-sectionally and 28 with newly diagnosed acromegaly studied longitudinally. Main outcome measures were visceral (VAT), subcutaneous (SAT), and intermuscular adipose tissue masses by whole-body magnetic resonance imaging; intrahepatic lipid (IHL) by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy; insulin resistance measures derived from fasting; and oral glucose tolerance test insulin and glucose levels.

Results

SAT and insulin-like growth factor 1 level, but not VAT or IHL, were independent predictors of insulin resistance in active acromegaly. VAT, SAT, and IHL gains were sustained long-term after surgery. VAT mass rise with surgery correlated inversely with rise in QUICKI while SAT rise correlated with fall in the Homeostatic Model Assessment score.

Conclusion

SAT and disease activity are important predictors of insulin resistance in active acromegaly. Adiposity gains are sustained long-term after surgical treatment and impact on the accompanying improvement in insulin resistance.

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