Background: Postoperative evaluation for growth hormone-producing pituitary tumors entails assessing remission via biochemical markers alongside MRI to detect residual tumors. While postoperative imaging provides important anatomical information regarding potential residual tumor, it is reasonable to ask if imaging offers largely redundant data when biochemical remission is already established. This study aimed to determine the clinical utility of post-surgical surveillance imaging in patients who achieved biochemical remission with normal age- and sex-matched IGF-1 at ~3 months postoperatively. Furthermore, we sought to evaluate the long-term durability of biochemical control in this patient subset. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis on patients who underwent endoscopic endonasal approach surgery for acromegaly and had a minimum of 3 years of follow-up clinical, biochemical and imaging data. Results: In total, 15 of 28 patients (54%) achieved initial biochemical remission and had a 100% sustained remission rate during the follow-up period of 3–14 years, underscoring the importance of surgical radicality for achieving durable remission. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that for patients who achieved biochemical remission following transsphenoidal surgery for acromegaly, routine postoperative imaging provides negligible additional diagnostic information from an endocrinological perspective. As such, we propose that no further postoperative imaging is needed for patients in clinical and biochemical remission. This approach offers a significant reduction in the clinical burden and healthcare costs for patients associated with long-term management of their disease.
Maletkovic et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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