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Background:
Approximately 480 primary, non-pituitary, brain tumours were diagnosed in Ireland each year between 1994 and 2013. Recent developments in treatment have greatly improved survival for younger patients in the 15-54 age range. The Irish National Neurosurgical Centre and the St Luke's Radiation Oncology Centre at Beaumont Hospital and treat approximately 200 patients with brain tumours per year with a combination of surgery, radiotherapy (RT) and chemotherapy with RT being the most commonly used treatment modality. With improved survivorship, the prospect of individuals living for several decades with co-morbidities induced by the tumour itself or surgical and RT treatments, raises new and complex issues for patients and clinicians.
The hypothalamus and pituitary gland in the brain are the key regulators of hormone action. They control several hormone systems including reproductive function (FSH, LH) growth (growth hormone), thyroid (TSH) and adrenal function (ACTH) as well as many other homeostatic mechanisms. It has long been recognised that therapeutic cranial RT to the pituitary gland causes hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction (hypopituitarism). Traditionally, high-risk groups for post-irradiation hypopituitarism were considered to be patients with pituitary tumours, survivors of childhood cancer and patients who received high-dose RT to treat nasopharyngeal cancers. The potential for cranial radiotherapy to cause significant pituitary dysfunction in adult patients with brain tumours has received little attention. The assumption has been that the hypothalamic-pituitary axis is more resistant in adults than in children to the effect of cranial RT. However, it is likely that the higher doses of RT, used to treat primary brain tumours in adults, causes significant hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction resulting in hypopituitarism. Preliminary data from the National Pituitary Centre in Beaumont Hospital has revealed that adult patients, treated with cranial radiotherapy for primary, non-pituitary brain tumours, are at risk of hypopituitarism. Approximately 40% of patients had pituitary deficiencies in at least one hormone axis, while 25% of patients had deficiencies in multiple hormone axes. Hypopituitarism confers significant morbidity and increased mortality to patients. At present, adult survivors of brain tumours are referred to the pituitary service for assessment on an ad-hoc basis meaning that many patients with hypopituitarism may go undiagnosed.
In addition to the challenges caused by hypopituitarism, long-term neuropsychological outcomes following a brain tumour cause significant functional impairments and reduced HR-QOL. Patients can present with impairments in specific cognitive domains such as memory and executive functioning or more global systems such as attention as well as significant issues with fatigue. In addition to these primary deficits, patients can also present with significant distress, fluctuant mood and anxiety. Despite the impact of brain tumours can exert, the National Cancer Control Program's National Survivorship Needs Assessment Review (2019) did not identify any studies reporting the needs of adult survivors of brain tumours in Ireland.
There is an urgent need to understand the impact of hypopituitarism and its treatment on HR-QOL and neuropsychological functioning. The proposed study will add to the limited existing literature on the prevalence of hypopituitarism in adult survivors of brain tumours treated with radiotherapy and generate detailed information on deficiency rates for individual pituitary hormones and how these deficiencies emerge over time. This will also be the first study to examine if treatment of radiotherapy-induced hypopituitarism (as part of routine clinical care) is associated with improved HR-QOL and neuropsychological functioning.
Full description
Hypothesis Adult survivors of primary, non-pituitary brain tumours have an increased risk of hypopituitarism and experience impairments in HR-QOL and neuropsychological functioning. We hypothesise that diagnosis of these deficiencies and the subsequent active replacement of pituitary hormone deficits (as part of routine clinical care) will lead to an improvement in neuropsychological functioning and HR-QOL in adult survivors of primary brain tumours.
Objectives:
To examine the impact of radiotherapy on pituitary hormone function in adult survivors of primary, non-pituitary brain tumours.
To assess HR-QOL and neuropsychological functioning in adult survivors of primary, non-pituitary brain tumours.
To examine the impact of pituitary hormone replacement and optimisation (as part of routine clinical care) on HR-QOL and neuropsychological functioning in adult survivors of primary, non-pituitary brain tumours.
Methods
Study Design & Setting:
A cross-sectional study will be conducted in the RCSI clinical research centre, located on the Beaumont Hospital campus. The study will be conducted over three years from September 2023 to September 2025.
Participants:
The study population will consist of adults who have previously received cranial radiotherapy for a primary, non-pituitary brain tumour.
Patient Recruitment:
Study Procedure
Study Visit One:
Consent:
Assessments:
Baseline blood sampling:
Dynamic testing of pituitary function:
• Patients will undergo dynamic testing of the ACTH and growth hormone axes using a glucagon stimulation test (GST).
• The Beaumont Hospital GST protocol will be followed throughout.
• A cannula will be inserted into the patient's forearm. Baseline serum samples for glucose, cortisol and growth hormone will be drawn from the cannula.
Neuropsychological assessment:
• A battery of neuropsychological tests to assess for cognitive, memory, language and visuo-spatial dysfunction will be performed. These tests are fully validated and have been widely used in the research setting.
HR-QOL assessment:
Study visit one is then complete.
Review of Pituitary Assessments:
• Baseline and dynamic test results will be reviewed after study visit one by the principal investigator and research fellow.
• Selected patients whose GST identifies cortisol deficiency will be asked to attend the RCSI-CRC for an additional study visit to undergo a short synacthen test (SST). This is to confirm adrenal insufficiency as the GST has a false positive rate of approximately 20% for ACTH deficiency.
Treatment History and Radiotherapy Dose Calculation:
• The patient's tumour histology, staging and neurosurgical treatment history will be obtained from their physical and electronic medical records in Beaumont Hospital and St Luke's Centre Radiation Oncology at Beaumont Hospital.
• The type, dose, dose per fraction of radiotherapy received by the hypothalamus/ pituitary (which will be estimated from planning scans using the biological equivalent dose) will be recorded in collaboration with Professor Clare Faul, Dr David Fitzpatrick's and Dr Nazmi ElBeltagi's in St Luke's Radiation Oncology Centre at Beaumont Hospital.
Study Visit Two • All study participants will be asked to return for a second study visit, four months after their first visit.
Repeat measurements will be taken including:
o Weight, blood pressure and body composition.
o Fasting 9am blood samples to assess baseline pituitary function and metabolic phenotype [as previously outlined].
All patients will have their HR-QOL and neuropsychological functioning reassessed to measure the change over the course of the study.
End of study
• Patients diagnosed with hypopituitarism during the study will be followed up in the endocrinology clinic in Beaumont Hospital (as is the case for all patients with hypopituitarism).
Enrollment
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Mark Sherlock, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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