Dopamine agonist therapy for prolactinomas: do we need to rethink the place of surgery in prolactinoma management?
- PMID: 37435462
- PMCID: PMC10259306
- DOI: 10.1530/EO-21-0038
Dopamine agonist therapy for prolactinomas: do we need to rethink the place of surgery in prolactinoma management?
Abstract
The current treatment paradigm for prolactinomas involves dopamine agonist (DA) therapy as the first-line treatment, with surgical resection reserved for cases where there is DA failure due to resistance or intolerance. This review highlights how DA therapy can be optimised to overcome its increasingly recognised pitfalls, whilst also addressing the potential for expanding the use of surgery in the management of prolactinomas. The first part of the review discusses the limitations of DA therapy, namely: DA resistance; common DA side effects; and the rare but serious DA-induced risks of cardiac valvulopathy, impulse control disorders, psychosis, CSF rhinorrhoea and tumour fibrosis. The second part of the review explores the role of surgery in prolactinoma management with reference to its current second-line position and recent calls for surgery to be considered as an alternative first-line treatment alongside DA therapy. Randomised trials comparing medical vs surgical therapy for prolactinomas are currently underway. Pending these results, a low surgical threshold approach is herein proposed, whereby DA therapy remains the default treatment for prolactinomas unless there are specific triggers to consider surgery, including concern regarding DA side effects or risks in vulnerable patients, persistent and bothersome DA side effects, emergence of any serious risks of DA therapy, expected need for long-term DA therapy, as well as the traditional indications for surgery. This approach should optimise the use of DA therapy for those who will most benefit from it, whilst instituting surgery early in others in order to minimise the cumulative burden of prolonged DA therapy.
Keywords: cardiac valvulopathy; dopamine agonists; impulse control disorders; prolactinoma; surgery.
© The authors.
Conflict of interest statement
The author declares that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of this review.
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References
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- Andereggen L, Frey J, Andres RH, Luedi MM, El-Koussy M, Widmer HR, Beck J, Mariani L, Seiler RW, Christ E.2021aFirst-line surgery in prolactinomas: lessons from a long-term follow-up study in a tertiary referral center. Journal of Endocrinological Investigation 442621–2633. (10.1007/s40618-021-01569-6) - DOI - PMC - PubMed
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- Andereggen L, Frey J, Andres RH, Luedi MM, Gralla J, Schubert GA, Beck J, Mariani L, Christ E.2021bImpact of primary medical or surgical therapy on prolactinoma patients’ BMI and metabolic profile over the long-term. Journal of Clinical and Translational Endocrinology 24100258 doi:10.1016/j.jcte.2021.100258. - PMC - PubMed
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