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      Significance of "abnormal" nadir growth hormone levels after oral glucose in postoperative patients with acromegaly in remission with normal insulin-like growth factor-I levels.

      The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
      Acromegaly, blood, surgery, Adult, Aged, Arginine, diagnostic use, Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glucose Tolerance Test, Human Growth Hormone, Humans, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I, metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Period, Remission Induction

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          Abstract

          Our initial study in postoperative patients with acromegaly identified a group of patients in remission, as defined by normal IGF-I levels, but who had a subtle abnormality of GH suppression after oral glucose. To investigate the significance of this abnormality, we have undertaken further detailed testing of GH secretion and a longitudinal follow-up of some of these patients. Of the 110 postoperative patients with acromegaly evaluated by oral glucose tolerance test, 76 were in remission (i.e. normal IGF-I level), and of these subjects with acromegaly in remission, 50 had normal nadir GH (<0.14 microg/ml) (group I), and 26 had abnormal nadir GH (>0.14 microg/ml) (group II). Fourteen subjects in remission, seven from remission group I and seven from remission group II, underwent additional testing consisting of both hourly GH sampling over 8 h and, on a separate day, arginine stimulation testing. The mean of hourly GH was higher in group II (0.47 +/- 0.04 microg/liter) than in group I (0.19 +/- 0.07 microg/liter; P = 0.002). GH response to arginine was greater in group II than in group I (P < 0.01). Of those patients in remission from the initial cohort studied, 49 (30 subjects from group I and 19 from group II) underwent serial longitudinal oral glucose tolerance testing every 1-2 yr over a 1- to 6.5-yr period (mean follow-up, 3.2 yr). The initial pattern of GH suppression persisted in most patients. IGF-I levels remained normal in all patients in group II, but five subjects from group II developed an elevated IGF-I level and, thus, a biochemical recurrence. The rate of disease recurrence was greater in group II than in group I (P = 0.003). We have found that some postoperative subjects with acromegaly in remission with normal IGF-I levels have persistently abnormal nadir GH levels after oral glucose that may be accompanied by other evidence of greater GH secretion than postoperative patients with normal GH suppression. This abnormal pattern of GH suppression may be associated with increased risk of disease recurrence in some patients.

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