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A comparative, population-based analysis of pituitary incidentalomas vs clinically manifesting sellar masses.

PURPOSE: Sellar masses may present either with clinical manifestations of mass effect/hormonal dysfunction (CMSM) or incidentally on imaging (pituitary incidentaloma (PI)). This novel population-based study compares these two entities.

METHODS: Retrospective analysis of all patients within a provincial pituitary registry between January 2006 and June 2014.

RESULTS: Nine hundred and three patients were included (681 CMSM, 222 PI). CMSM mainly presented with secondary hormone deficiencies (SHDs) or stalk compression (29.7%), whereas PIs were found in association with neurological complaints (34.2%) ( P  < 0.0001). PIs were more likely to be macroadenomas (70.7 vs 49.9%; P  < 0.0001). The commonest pathologies among CMSM were prolactinomas (39.8%) and non-functioning adenomas (NFAs) (50%) in PI ( P  < 0.0001). SHDs were present in 41.3% CMSM and 31.1% PI patients ( P  < 0.0001) and visual field deficit in 24.2 and 29.3%, respectively ( P  = 0.16). CMSM were more likely to require surgery (62.9%) than PI (35.8%) ( P  < 0.0005). The commonest surgical indications were impaired vision and radiological evidence of optic nerve compression. Over a follow-up period of 5.7 years for CMSM and 5.0 years for PI, tumour growth/recurrence occurred in 7.8% of surgically treated CMSM and 2.6% without surgery and PI, 0 and 4.9%, respectively ( P  = 1.0). There were no significant differences in the risk of new-onset SHD in CMSM vs PI in those who underwent surgery ( P  = 0.7) and those who were followed without surgery ( P  = 0.58).

CONCLUSIONS: This novel study compares the long-term trends of PI with CMSM, highlighting the need for comprehensive baseline and long-term radiological and hormonal evaluations in both entities.

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