Showing posts with label bilateral adrenalectomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bilateral adrenalectomy. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Elusive Remission: More Pituitary Treatments or BLA


Today, someone on the message boards asked about removing both adrenal glands. This surgery is called bilateral adrenalectomy (BLA), as a treatment for persistent pituitary Cushing's.  Here is my response:

I've noticed that the people who replied have never had BLAs. I'm the moderator of a group with more than 400 patients with Cushing's who have undergone surgical removal of both adrenal glands.  

Based on our group, people have BLAs for several reasons.


1) PITUITARY HYPERPLASIA
Patients pursue BLA when pathology from pituitary surgery shows pituitary hyperplasia. This means that the pituitary is covered in abnormal pituitary cells. Since every cell must be removed for pituitary surgery to be successful, there isn't much for the neurosurgeon to do, since further pituitary treatment is unlikely to put the patient into remission.


2) INOPERABLE TUMORS and RADIATION.
The pituitary tumor is inoperable because it is located near the carotid artery or optic chasm. Additional pituitary surgery can lead to stroke if the tumor is located near the carotid arteries or blindness if the tumor is located near the optic chasm. Many docs want to pursue radiation even in these delicate places, but the radiation beams are 2-3 millimeters wide, and the tissue left behind after our 2-10+ millimeter tumors are removed is extremely small. So... that laser is still too wide for my comfort. Would an artist paint a woman's face on a standard canvas with a brush used for painting the side of a house? No, the brush width is too wide to capture the delicate details needed for a portrait. Paint would go where you don't want it, and that is the problem with radiation. On bigger tumors in other parts of the body, 2-3 mm beam sounds small, so radiation risks are lower. For us, there is a risk that radiation misses or overradiates the intended area. A close friend of mine had radiation damage to the hypothalamus when radiation meant for her pituitary missed. She was very ill and couldn't control her body temperature for last five years after radiation. She was extremely hot when cold out and extremely cold when hot out. Think about that: radiation that missed prevented a mammal/ human from doing a totally mammalian thing:  self-regulating its temperature of 97-98.6 degrees! 

So FYI, from a patient who has been in the Cushing's trenches online for 15 years, radiation is not the cure that doctors say it is. To this day, I fear radiation far more than I ever feared BLA. After seeing what my dear friend went through, in my opinion, it is more dangerous than a BLA. Would the doctors agree? No. They want you to have radiation so they keep their facility success rates higher, oh, and so you have the chance at successful treatment. Plus, they will never personally see and treat 430 BLA patients in their practice. Unfortunately, their recommendations are so often based in fear of the unknown vs what is possible. We BLAers face fear daily and live the best life we can despite it. 

Also, a big one—radiation takes 18-60 years to actually work. In the meantime, the patient is still experiencing high cortisol symptoms and horrific, irreversible damage to the body continues. The doctors may put patients on drugs like Korlym, Signifor, or ketoconazole, but all are meant for short-term, band aid use no matter what drug reps or docs being paid to prescribe the drugs say.  

So, the questions becomes, how much more damage can your body take? How much more of life are you willing to miss while waiting for the radiation your doctor wants for you to work?


3) PITUITARY HORMONE REPLACEMENT AFTER ANY PITUITARY TREATMENT.
The pituitary is the master gland and it makes many neurotransmitters and hormones that docs can't test for. Each successive pituitary surgery—even performed by skilled neurosurgeons—will damage the pituitary. The more pituitary surgeries means more damage to the normal homeostasis the gland has, even if the surgeons just removes the tumors. I replace most of the pituitary hormones after two unsuccessful pituitary surgeries: two thyroid medicines, growth hormone injections, progesterone, estrogen patch, testosterone, melatonin for sleep. I do not replace vasopressin for diabetes insipidus. I'm trying to get oxytocin testing soon. 

   PS Patients with adrenal Cushing's who don't have pituitary surgeries prior to BLA tend to do better than the rest of us. That right there shows me the damage that any pituitary surgery does. 


4) FERTILITY. Cushing's strikes woman five times more than me, as 4 of 5 Cushies are female. Therefore, fertility is a big topic largely ignored in the consultations female patients have with even the top endocrinologists and surgeons. If you have not had children or were hoping for more children, successive pituitary surgeries reduce your chance to have a child naturally.
Doctors will tell you—as they swore to me—that reproductive endocrinologists can get you pregnant with fertility drugs. Who is gonna pay for that?!  Many of us have no money left after Cushing's diagnosis and treatment to pay for the advanced fertility treatments, like egg retrieval and in vitro fertilization, when first line meds like clomid to increase egg production fail to work on a damaged pituitary. 

Therefore, fertility expectations must be a consideration for the patient even if the doctors (who have their own families and never had to make this decision) don't consider it or even mention it.

For me, I tried to get pregnant again between my first and second pituitary surgeries when I was still experiencing Cushing’s symptoms. I didn't ovulate because LH and FSH wouldn't budge. My reproductive endocrinologist and nurse gave me clomid to artificially boost follicle (eggs) production and then boost me with meds to release the eggs. Sadly, I never made enough viable eggs. Doctor was expecting 10-25 follicles after the clomid boost, but I struggled top produce 4-5. Month after month, it was the same. I was extremely disappointed.
After six months, my husband and I decided that our family with one child was complete, and it was time to care for myself. So, I moved on to second pituitary surgery. 

P. S.  Pregnancy is possible after BLA. Many Cushie BLA women get pregnant after BLA. We are up to almost 50 babies!  All mamas conceived easily after BLA. In most instances, mothers were shocked at how quickly they became pregnant, and they were ELATED with these pregnancies, especially when many experienced years of infertility caused by Cushing's.

NOTE: I encourage all Cushie females with fertility concerns to ask a doctor to test anti mullerian hormone (AMH), a simple blood test. MedlinePlus, a source for the National Library of Medicine says:

"An AMH test is often used to check a woman's ability to produce eggs that can be fertilized for pregnancy. A woman's ovaries can make thousands of eggs during her childbearing years. The number declines as a woman gets older. AMH levels help show how many potential egg cells a woman has left. This is known as the ovarian reserve. If a woman's ovarian reserve is high, she may have a better chance of getting pregnant. She may also be able to wait months or years before trying to get pregnant. If the ovarian reserve is low, it may mean a woman will have trouble getting pregnant, and should not delay very long before trying to have a baby. You may need an AMH test if you are a woman who is having difficulty getting pregnant. The test can help show what your chances are of conceiving a baby... If you are already seeing a fertility specialist, your doctor may use the test to predict whether you will respond well to treatment, such as in vitro fertilization (IVF)."

By the time I had my BLA, I was 41. Years later, I learned about AMH and had it tested. Mine was ZERO, sadly. 


5) NELSON'S. Nelson's occurs in less than 10% of the 430 BLAers on this group. Is 10% still too high for comfort? Of course. However, that means 90% didn't develop Nelson's, and that is a good thing. We have BLAers in the group who have had their BLAs 40-50 years ago to 15-20 years ago to 3-5 years ago to the newly adrenalless. So the group is good for longitudinal studies. 

   PS I have pituitary tumors 3 and 4 percolating up in my pituitary right now. They aren't producing excess ACTH or pressing against anything, so we will monitor it. Even with those pesky things up north, I still have no regrets about choosing to have a BLA. 


6) MEDICATION EVERY DAY. If you had one or two pituitary surgeries, chances are high that you must take medication daily to replace the pituitary hormones lost from those surgeries or just the presence of the tumor(s). For us BLAers, we know that taking cortisol every day is easier to manage than controlling Cushing's excessive cortisol. We know that we control the cortisol; the cortisol doesn't control us. We Cushies know how devastating the pervasive attack of cortisol is on our bodies and minds. For us, BLA provides long-sought-out relief. We get into a daily routine with timers, cortisol pills, aldosterone pills, salt intake (pickle juice, pretzels, broth), and electrolyte drinks. Since the adrenal glands control electrolyte balance, we must stay hydrated daily. We drink lots of water! It becomes a new way of life. We take things easy because we have to. We learn to say no more because we pay the price and the stress will send us into adrenal crisis. And we know that our bodies give us lots of warning. If unheeded and untreated, we go from adrenal insufficiency to adrenal crisis. 

Think of it this way: you wouldn't stop driving just because you will have to stop your car at intersections, where you can die if you fail to do so and you can get crushed in the middle of intersections, right? What do you do to keep yourself safe at intersections? You stay alert. Keep your eyes open for the light to change from green to red. You travel at posted speeds. You apply the brake and slowly bring your car to a safe stop in front of the white line. It is the same for adrenal crisis. We take the necessary steps to prevent us from going into the dangerous intersection of adrenal crisis. As long as we commit to doing that every day, just as we do when driving, then we can stay safe.

   PS I got a service dog to keep me from adrenal crisis. In the year I have had him, I've been able to stay ahead of adrenal crisis and even adrenal insufficiency, as he alerts me to chemical changes in my body before I am symptomatic. That's so helpful!

7) IRREVERSIBLE. While BLA seems intimidating and overwhelming for others, we BLAers know it saved our lives and gave us back a new life without cushing's. For all its risks, that hope and relief cannot be understated. When asked if they regret their BLA, 7-10 out of 430 say they regret it. Those patients have poor follow up care, don't get tests regularly, and don't push doctors for what they need or don't change doctors to get what they need. Overwhelmingly, people are happy they made the decision to have a BLA. It is definitely a no-going-back decision but most of life's big decisions are. We must make the best decision we can at the time we have to make the decision, weighing benefits vs risks. We step forward and hope for the best. The group is a lifeline to all of us who have to move forward in our daily lives and experience things doctors only read about in medical journals or know second-hand from hearing their patients tell them. Patients know more than doctors about BLA, but we strive to work as partners with our doctors to get the best care. We patients save each other's lives, and I'm grateful to have built this group from one Cushie to 180 BLAers in the past 4.5 years. (edit three years later on 6/30/2021. We now have over 430 Cushies who had BLAs in our facebook group. My guess is that less than 5% or 21 patients regret their BLA and would not recommend it. The others say that it takes some getting used to, and we need to be careful, but zero cortisol is WAY easier to handle than excess cortisol).


You can read more in Dr. LaCroix's article, entitled, ""Bilateral adrenalectomy in the 21st century: when to use it for hypercortisolism?"

Guerin, Carole, David Taieb, Giorgio Treglia, Thierry Brue, André Lacroix, Frederic Sebag, and Frederic Castinetti. "Bilateral adrenalectomy in the 21st century: when to use it for hypercortisolism?"Endocrine-Related Cancer 23.2 (2016): R131-R142.  

Therapeutic options available for the treatment of Cushing's syndrome (CS) have expanded over the last 5 years. For instance, the efficient management of severe hypercortisolism using a combination of fast-acting steroidogenesis inhibitors has been reported. Recent publications on the long-term efficacy of drugs or radiation techniques have also demonstrated low toxicity. These data should encourage endocrinologists to reconsider the place of bilateral adrenalectomy in patients with ACTH-dependent etiologies of CS; similarly, the indication of bilateral adrenalectomy is reassessed in primary bilateral macro-nodular adrenal hyperplasia. The objective of this review is to compare the efficacy and side effects of the various therapeutic options of hypercortisolism with those of bilateral adrenalectomy, in order to better define its indications in the 21st century.



Want to find me? Send me a message on Facebook on my page: Fight Cushing's with Moxie. Bye for now!

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Looking back at the path you chose



In case you haven't noticed, helping other Cushing's patients wade through the cortisol quagmire is kinda a big deal for me. I choose to spend my free time doing it. Why?

I don't like seeing others struggle. 

I don't like that Cushing's is ruining Cushies' lives. 

I don't like how poorly doctors treat us. 

I detest inefficiency.

So I do my best to take time and answer questions from blog readers and facebook friends.  Tonight, the post was about ketoconazole. The Cushie had gone to the emergency room twice for adrenal insufficiency and adrenal crisis while taking ketoconazole. 

I remembered that I too took ketoconazole. My memory isn't what it used to be, and as such, I set out to search for the word keto on this blog, for so much time has elapsed that my Cushie brain can't hold the details any longer. Fair enough. 

I found the link I wanted (Keto: It Was Fun While It Lasted), but I found the post that proceeded that one by just three days called New Chapter of my Life dated November 3, 2013.  I shared the link for you to review if you are so inclined.

I read through this lost post wondering what was the new chapter of my life. I don't remember any new chapter of my life?! I was floored with emotion as I read my own words recounting the story of my decision to proceed with a bilateral adrenalectomy, which doctors often dissuade us from considering because BLA is the last resort treatment for Cushing's. 

The phrase, "I did everything the medical community asked of me" really hit home. Because don't we all? Aren't Cushies pushed beyond the point we can handle emotionally, mentally, and physically every single day and somehow manage to fight on until the day we reach remission? Does anyone remember my explanation for how statistically rare it is to have Cushing's and yet, we do? Cushies have hit the unlucky jackpot? for Cushing's.

BLA is not easy. It has taken many, many days to get to know my body and what it needs. I do stand tall in the explanation that I made to myself at that time, as it is still one that stands up to reason and emotion. It stands the test of time. 

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

I will post one day soon about the improvements I've experienced since BLA. I will foreshadow that it is difficult to parse out what long term effects are from Cushing's and high cortisol and what I can blame on rheumatoid arthritis. That's for another day.

See you soon, Cushies.


Thursday, April 2, 2015

Day 1: Cushing's Awareness Month Bloggers Challenge


Cushing's Awareness Month:
Bloggers Challenge
Day 1

Here we are again on April 1st. I join my fellow Cushies in blogging for the 30 days of April in an effort to bring awareness to our disease, Cushing's.

On March 28, 2007, I first saw the word Cushing's while researching thyroid doctors in San Antonio, Texas. Within minutes, I knew the word applied to me. I diagnosed myself with a rare disease on the Internet. I could hardly believe it, and none of the doctors believed it.

These past eight years have been filled with some of the darkest moments of my life. At the time, I wondered if I could make it through the next five minutes. Somehow, I endured the medical challenges before me. I faced disappointment and delay. I have been dismissed and dismayed. I have been tenacious and stubborn in fighting for myself, for what is right.

I admit to being stubborn, refusing to give up the fight when I know the fight is important.

Recently, I have learned to make peace with my disease. No matter what anyone says, you don't get ill and make peace immediately. Peace and uncertainty don't mix. You can't face devastation and immediately say, "Oh well. I guess this is my new normal, and it stinks. There is nothing I can do about it." No no no. That is settling for less than you deserve.

Peace comes with accepting the dire consequences of your disease, facing and befriending death as well as life, and still choosing to walk that line every day with a full heart and the stubbornness that won't let you give up or let Cushing's win.

I strive for peace.

I am 15 months post op BLA, or bilateral adrenalectomy for those with a lot of time on their hands for extra words. 

Another year has gone by. Cortisol is as much a part of my life as ever. Instead of cursing pituitary tumors for high cortisol, I scramble to take my cortisol medicine replacements three times a day. The irony is not lost on me. 

In the coming days, I will tell you more about my life after BLA, and how I navigate this stressful world with no adrenal glands. It's not easy (hint: I take a lot of naps).

I hope that you will stay tuned and learn a little more about the nuances of these cortisol-based diseases of Cushing's (too much) and Addison's (zero). In order to survive, I must understand both.

Sincerely,
Melissa

Cushing's warrior and advocate. 
Pituitary surgery for Cushing's in 06/2009 unsuccessful. 
Pit surgery for Cushing's in 04/2011 unsuccessful. 
Took ketoconazole and suffered through adrenal insufficiency for 14 months. Drug banned in European Union. I stopped postponing my life and chose to get rid of high cortisol.
BLA 12/31/2013 successful. 
I'm fighting to get my life back, and I will win.


Sunday, January 25, 2015

Bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease

I would love to see the whole article because the abstract seems pretty basic.  However, the news is good. Bilateral adrenalectomy or BLA is a good option for patients. Doctors should present this surgery as an option to all patients. It should be our choice to make.
Bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease.

Author
Katznelson L1.
  • 1Departments of Medicine and Neurosurgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, 875 Blake Wilbur Dr MC 5826, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA, lkatznelson@stanford.edu.
Journal

Pituitary. 2015 Jan 8. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract

PURPOSE: Review the indications, outcomes, and consequences of bilateral adrenalectomy (BLA) in patients with Cushing's disease.
METHODS: A literature review was performed.
RESULTS: The primary therapy for Cushing's disease is surgery, with medical therapy and radiation therapy relegated to an adjuvant role. BLA is indicated in cases of persistent disease following pituitary surgery or in situations where rapid normalization of hypercortisolism is required. When performed via the laparoscopic approach, BLA is associated with a significantly reduced morbidity compared to the traditional, open approach. Following BLA, patients are at risk for adrenal crisis and the concern of Nelson's syndrome. However, BLA leads to a rapid resolution of the signs and symptoms of CS and leads to an improved long-term quality of life.
CONCLUSION: BLA should be considered in the treatment algorithm for patients with persistent CD after failed pituitary surgery, especially in patients who have severe consequences of hypercortisolism or desire pregnancy.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Straight Talk Cushing's

It's good to have choices.

Now there are two FDA-approved drugs available for those Cushies who are not a candidate for a/another surgery but still remain uncured -- Corcept's Korlym and Novartis' Signifor. Two years ago, there were none.

The long-term benefits are clear.

The entire Cushing's community benefits from Big Pharma dollars spent to create what we all want -- disease awareness, earlier diagnosis for all patients, and better treatment options.

To this end, I want to share the fist video that I have seen from Novartis to further this shared mission. It is well done and quite informative.

Share the link and save a life.

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2vS7sVvx0o&feature=youtu.be

(I tried to embed this video but this action is forbidden by the Novartis youtube channel. Click through. It is an informative video.)

Friday, November 29, 2013

What We Know Just Changed: "Adrenal glands produce ACTH"

NOTE:  I wrote this blog entry after taking my sleeping pill for the night. I'll reread this in a few days and catch any errors. Right now, my eyes are blurry and my hands don't want to touch the correct keys. :)


What we know about Cushing's has just changed. I mean, for me, it has changed in a profound way, just in the reading of one press release online tonight.

I have seen many Cushing's patients go through one, two, or more pituitary surgeries once hypercortisolemia is detected.   Once doctors sheepishly diagnose patients with Cushing's, they shepherd us into pituitary surgery.  WHY?  
  • The medical literature indicates that 70% of Cushing's cases are due to a pituitary tumor;
  • Nodules rarely appear on the patient's CT scans of the adrenals that would suggest an adrenal source of Cushing's (syndrome);  
  • These patients can have high ACTH (indicating pituitary source) or normal ACTH, so the likely surgical target is the pituitary;
  • We patients seek a cure from this physical, emotional, and mental H- E- double hockey sticks, and we follow our doctors' advice;
  • It's all we know about Cushing's at this time in history.
Despite all that, unfortunately, patients are often uncured by pituitary surgeries and choose the last resort treatment of bilateral adrenalectomy (BLA) to stop high cortisol at its source and gamble for an improved quality of life.  My minds often drifts back to an informal online survey of Cushing's patients who underwent BLA as treatment indicate that their adrenal glands were "plump" and "dense when removed."  Surgeons note this upon removing the adrenal glands and often include this information into the surgical reports, and pathology reports show that Cushie adrenals often weigh much more than the normal four to six grams each with fat dessicated. It is not uncommon for a patient's adrenal glands to weigh 10 and 15 grams each.  How? Why?  For those I've spoke with online, we don't know the answer.  I personally haven't seen anything written about the size of adrenal glands in relation to high cortisol and Cushing's. These dense behemoth little trouble makers trick us, because they don't appear larger on the CT scans. Radiologist love to say "adrenal glands normal in size" or they run them together with no special mention, such as "kidneys, adrenals, liver, and pancreas appear normal in size".  The surgeon sees the size of the adrenals first, kinda like finding out the gender and weight of new babies, except our surgeon removes adrenal twins, both weighing more than their mamas and papas could safely carry, so they had to come out. The size of the babies are often a surprise to everyone!

Oh, yeah. Back to the press release that says "Adrenal glands produce ACTH."

Today after our Thanksgiving dinner and celebration, I happily turned to my new iPhone 5s, another thing for which I am extremely grateful (as well as communicating with people from my bed while resting).  I stopped in my tracks when I read this press release from the New England Journal of Medicine regarding a genetic link to bilateral adrenal Cushing's.  I couldn't believe my eyes.  

A test? A genetic link?  So this would tell if we patients indeed had Cushing's, which endocrinologists are always insisting we don't really have, and they can screen our family members to get them the care they need more urgently?  WOW. This is good.

It was the first time I had ever seen the words "bilateral adrenal Cushing's."  I have seen Cushing's disease, typically referring to a pituitary source of high cortisol, and Cushing's syndrome, which refers to an adrenal source. What is this "bilateral adrenal Cushing's", asks the person about to undergo a bilateral adrenalectomy?

WHOA. Does this new article due out on Black Friday 2013 really say what I think it says in the press release?  

"The adrenal glands from the same type of patients with two large adrenal glands can produce ACTH, which is normally produced by the pituitary gland." [blogger emphasis] 

Without reading the whole article, this sure sounds to me like these researchers in France might have determined that the adrenal glands produce ACTH, not just cortisol.  I wonder if the production mechanism is similar to an ectopic location such as the lungs or ovary? I can't tell what it means from the press release, which I have pasted below.  We may have to wait until Friday, after Thanksgiving, to see if the NEJM folks are really working or shopping.  

POST THAT ARTICLE!  This way more important than any deal on a waffle iron, a Monsters University DVD, or boots with fuzzy crap on the outside.

We, the Cushing's community, are waiting for the full article!!


*** PRESS RELEASE BELOW ***
Are you carrying adrenal Cushing's syndrome without knowing it?
Genetic research that will be published tomorrow in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests to
Dr. André Lacroix, professor at the University of Montreal, that clinicians' understanding and treatment of a form of Cushing's syndrome affecting both adrenal glands will be fundamentally changed, and that moreover, it might be appropriate to begin screening for the genetic mutations that cause this form of the disease.

"Screening family members of bilateral adrenal Cushing's syndrome patients with genetic mutations may identify affected silent carriers," Lacroix said in an editorial in the Journal. "The development of drugs that interrupt the defective genetic chemical link that causes the syndrome could, if confirmed to be effective in people, provide individualized specific therapies for hypercortisolism, eliminate the current practice of removing both adrenal glands, and possibly prevent disease progression in genetically affected family members."

Adrenal glands sit above the kidneys are mainly responsible for releasing cortisol, a stress hormone. Hypercortiolism means a high level of the adrenal hormone cortisol, which causes many symptoms including weight gain, high blood pressure, diabetes, osteoporosis, concentration deficit and increased cardiovascular deaths.

Cushing's syndrome can be caused by corticosteroid use (such as for asthma or arthritis), a tumor on the adrenal glands, or a pituitary gland that releases too much ACTH. The pituitary gland sits under the brain and releases various hormones that regulate our bodies' mechanisms.

Jérôme Bertherat is a researcher at Cochin Hospital in Paris. In the study he published today, he showed that 55% of Cushing's Syndrome patients with bilaterally very enlarged adrenal glands have mutations in a gene that predisposes to the development of adrenal tumours. This means that bilateral adrenal Cushing's is much more hereditary than previously thought. The new knowledge will also enable clinicians to undertake genetic screening. Hervé Lefebvre is a researcher at the University Hospital in Rouen, France. His research shows that the adrenal glands from the same type of patients with two large adrenal glands can produce ACTH, which is normally produced by the pituitary gland. Hormone receptors are the chemical link that cause a cell to behave differently when a hormone is present. Several misplaced hormone receptors cause the ACTH to be produced in the enlarged benign adrenal tissue. Knowing this means that researchers might be able to develop drugs that interrupt the receptors for these hormones and possibly even prevent the benign tissue from developing in the first place.

More information: 

André Lacroix, M.D., Heredity and Cortisol Regulation in Bilateral Macronodular Adrenal Hyperplasia, New England Journal of Medicine 369;22, November 28, 2013 

Estelle Louiset, Ph.D., Céline Duparc, Ph.D., Jacques Young, M.D., Ph.D., Sylvie Renouf, Ph.D., Milène Tetsi Nomigni, M.Sc., Isabelle Boutelet, Ph.D., Rossella Libé, M.D., Zakariae Bram, M.Sc., Lionel Groussin, M.D., Ph.D., Philippe Caron, M.D., Antoine Tabarin, M.D., Ph.D., Fabienne Grunenberger, M.D., SophieChristin-Maitre, M.D., Ph.D., Xavier Bertagna, M.D., Ph.D., Jean-Marc Kuhn, M.D., Youssef Anouar, Ph.D., Jérôme Bertherat, M.D., Ph.D., and Hervé Lefebvre, M.D., Ph.D., Intraadrenal Corticotropin in Bilateral Macronodular Adrenal Hyperplasia, New England Journal of Medicine 369;22, November 28, 2013. 

Guillaume Assié, M.D., Ph.D., Rossella Libé, M.D., Stéphanie Espiard, M.D., Marthe Rizk-Rabin, Ph.D., Anne Guimier, M.D., Windy Luscap, M.Sc., Olivia Barreau, M.D., Lucile Lefèvre, M.Sc., Mathilde Sibony, M.D., Laurence Guignat, M.D., Stéphanie Rodriguez, M.Sc., Karine. "Are you carrying adrenal Cushing's syndrome without knowing it?." PHYSorg.com. 27 Nov 2013.

Perlemoine, B.S., Fernande René-Corail, B.S., Franck Letourneur, Ph.D., Bilal Trabulsi, M.D., Alix Poussier, M.D., Nathalie Chabbert-Buffet, M.D., Ph.D., Françoise Borson-Chazot, M.D., Ph.D., Lionel Groussin, M.D., Ph.D., Xavier Bertagna, M.D., Constantine A. Stratakis, M.D., Ph.D., Bruno Ragazzon Ph.D., and Jérôme Bertherat, M.D., Ph.D., ARMC5 Mutations in Macronodular Adrenal Hyperplasia with Cushing's Syndrome, New England Journal of Medicine 369;22, November 28, 2013

Provided by University of Montreal

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.  [The blogger provides this information for information purpose only. The blogger generates no advertising income, and all articles are presented to educate the patient, family member, or friend who may be facing Cushing's.]

Monday, November 4, 2013

New Chapter of my Life



Hey everyone! I've missed you all. It's not that I haven't. I just haven't even able to keep up on posting like I wish I could. I hope you will always understand why and forgive me.

Today, I'm back with a big update.

I now walk the final  steps towards BLA and a cure from Cushing's. 

After two non-curative transsphenoidal pituitary surgeries, I spent many months wondering what to do and just trying to manage my symptoms. That has become increasing difficult and almost impossible for me as the days and months wore on. 

I started ketoconazole in August 2012 with mixed results. I slept well sometimes but still would wake up at 4:00 am, a Cushie's witching hour.  I felt good at the beginning but it started to wear off.  I spent some hours in the ER on 10/10/12 as I faced severe symptoms of adrenal insufficiency. I needed IV saline and IV hydrocortisone when the injection of 100 mg of Solu-cortef my husband gave me at home wasn't working.  I lost 23 pounds but I felt weak, unfocused, irritable, and overwhelmed. My daytime drowsiness was worse than ever.  I complained to Dr F in June 2013 that I had narcolepsy; I would sit on the couch for only a few moments in the late morning or afternoon, and I would fall asleep instantly. This is after having sleeping six to eight hours. I would just pass out.

In the past few months, I've taken Ritalin at Dr F's suggestion, and it has worked to keep me awake during the day.  I take a long-acting dose in the am and a short acting dose in the early pm. 

I dropped the ketoconazole and a week later, I saw Dr F for an office visit last Monday. He said he needed recent tests before he could clear me for surgery. I tested every day and night until the early hours of Sunday morning.

Midnight cortisol serums
normal is less than 5
diagnostic is greater than 7.5

My results six nights in a row:
5.2, 16.1, 15.4, 8.8, 19.4, 10.8

I am pretty astonished. I had no idea I was high, much less this high. My high test value before was 12.8.   My cortisol has been so high at night that my body is producing zero cortisol during the day. In the past, before testing, my body has been getting only the 20 mg of morning Cortef that I took while I was on Keto and it wasn't enough. My body was unhappy probably because it had become accustomed to such high levels of cortisol. Any drop have me symptoms of adrenal insufficiency: nausea, diarrhea, loss of appetite, extreme fatigue, muscle pain, joint point, grouchiness. 

Now, I am pretty happy to have these test feathers in my rediagnosis cap.  I am waiting for results on four UFCs w/ 17OHS and five salivas taken during the same time period as the high midnight cortisol serums. I feel good that some will be high.  

I hope to be cleared for BLA within the week. There is no visible tumor on my pituitary. Even an exploratory third surgery is not wise, since my second neurosurgeon said surgery would "result in a guaranteed cerebrospinal fluid leak" based on the post operative tissue's location at the bottom of the gland. My doctor and I know that I am not a good fit for other medical therapies. It's BLA time.  I plan on having a BLA before the end of the year, since insurance pays 100% now.

I have done everything I can in the last six years as a Cushing's patient. I have done everything the medical community has required of me, and many things that should not be required:  guessing when to test, knowing what my body was feeling at every moment and what medication would best treat it, watching over every lab technician like a hawk, feeling guilty after outbursts of emotion towards my family and every time I missed family time so I could nap, even keeping up on refills of 15 medications and organizing a 31-day pill case, even when I wasn't sure I was feeling better from any of it. I have suffered in countless MRI machines that could barely hold my large frame but I made it through the hour with some anti-anxiety pills, pain meds, and a one moment at a time attitude.  

This is my road. This is my path. I accept it.  I feel relief and confidence. I am feeling peaceful and hopeful. 

Stay tuned as a march my way towards my cure from the cortisol beast. Thanks for sticking with me.

- Melissa 

Monday, April 22, 2013

Treating Nelson's Syndrome after BLA









Sustained improvements in plasma ACTH and clinical status in a patient with Nelson's syndrome treated with pasireotide LAR, a multireceptor somatostatin analog

Laurence Katznelson, MD
Stanford School of Medicine, Departments of Neurosurgery and Medicine, 875 Blake Wilbur Dr. MC 5821, Stanford, CA 94305-5821

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Laurence Katznelson, MD, Stanford School of Medicine, Departments of Neurosurgery and Medicine, 875 Blake Wilbur Dr. MC 5821, Stanford, CA 94305-5821lkatznelson@stanford.edu, tel: (650) 721-1020, fax: (650) 736-8100.


Abstract

Context: Nelson's syndrome refers to aggressive pituitary corticotroph adenoma growth after bilateral adrenalectomy (BLA) for treatment of Cushing's disease (CD). Pasireotide, a novel somatostatin analog, has been effective in treating CD. Here, the first case report of a patient with Nelson's syndrome treated with pasireotide is presented.
Case Presentation: A 55 yo female was diagnosed with CD in 1973 at age 15 y and underwent BLA 1 year later. She subsequently developed Nelson's syndrome and underwent multiple surgeries, and radiotherapy for adenoma growth.
Following presentation with ocular pain, third cranial nerve palsy, and finding of suprasellar tumor enlargement with hemorrhage, she began pasireotide LAR 60 mg/28 days IM. At baseline, fasting plasma ACTH was 42,710 pg/mL (normal, 5–27) and fasting plasma glucose was 98 mg/dL. After 1 month, ACTH declined to 4,272 pg/mL and has remained stable over 19 months of follow up. Hyperpigmentation progressively improved. MRI scans show reduction in the suprasellar component. Fasting plasma glucose increased to 124 mg/dL and she underwent diabetes management.
Evidence Acquisition and Synthesis:In this clinical case seminar, the current understanding of the treatment of Nelson's syndrome, including use of pasireotide in Cushing's disease, are summarized.
Conclusion: A case of Nelson's syndrome with clinically significant and dramatic biochemical and clinical responses to pasireotide administration is reported. Hyperglycemia was noted following pasireotide administration. Pasireotide may represent a useful tool in the medical management of Nelson's syndrome. Further study of the potential benefits and risks of pasireotide in this population is necessary.
Received February 22, 2013.
Accepted March 25, 2013.
Copyright © 2013 by The Endocrine Society

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

A Cushie's Job: Trudging through the Medical Literature

If you have spent any amount of time on this blog, you will know that I am patient advocate who encourages you to be the most informed and self-aware patient you can be.  For us Cushies, especially us cyclical Cushing's patients, it is imperative to be up-to-date on the medical literature.

You also know how difficult that task can be as we fight to keep our energy up for basic daily tasks and chores.  You also remember how Cushing's causes cognitive impairments that just don't give us the right state of mind -- clarity or positivity -- to take on a project this big.

So, I decided to just post stuff here, as I find it.  It may be a repeat (sorry, I probably forgot), or it may be new. Regardless, it will be stuff I am stumbling through as I relearn everything I have to know about Cushing's in order to make my decision.

I am reading through the medical literature for articles like Long-term remission rates after pituitary surgery for Cushing’s disease: the need for long-term surveillance posted by our dear Cushie friend Robin at Survive The Journey.  I am also trying to wade a list of articles my friend Susan recommended about cyclical Cushing's posted on PubMed, the government's database.  These free articles include research done with your tax dollars at the National Institute of Health (NIH). The NIH is considered an authority on Cushing's and even cyclical Cushing's. Based on what I have seen in my five years, the NIH seem to specialize in pediatric Cushing's cases more than adults, i.e. I see more pediatric patients than adult patients accepted for testing and treatment at the NIH.

So, I have to make my way through the medical literature about:
  • quality of life for patients after several pituitary surgeries vs. quality of life for those who chose BLA
  • remission rates for each type of treatment (3rd pituitary surgery vs BLA)
  • enzymes and other hormones produced in the pituitary that may vanish after repeated pituitary surgery
  • patient success stories for each
I mean, all this and a bag of chips. EVERYTHING!  I read a lot of this stuff in the beginning. It was "this could happen to me" reading, so the shock resonated longer than the information. Meaning, the scariness stuck when the facts didn't. 

Now, I find my mind so hazy that I just can't read through these medically-rigorous articles anymore. I really struggle.
I can't remember what I read already.
I can't find something I already found before.
I can't even think of good keywords to search.
I've already made a million laps around the internet.

It's a mess. I AM A MESS!

So, being that it is my blog, this is what I'm gonna do.  I plan to "store" articles here that I am reviewing for my own benefit. If you see something that you have never seen before, well, you benefit, too.

HEY!  THEN MAYBE YOU CAN MAKE MY DECISION FOR ME!

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Day 20: Surgiversary

DATE:  
APRIL 20, 2011.


TARGET:  
3 MILLIMETER TUMOR ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF PITUITARY.


OFFENSE:  
UNLAWFUL PRODUCTION OF EXCESS ACTH, SPURRED EXCESS PRODUCTION OF CORTISOL BY ADRENAL GLANDS.


ACCOMPLICE:  
ADRENAL GLANDS FOR AIDING AND ABETTING.


STRATEGY:  
TRANSSPHENOIDAL TRANSNASAL RESECTION OF PITUITARY TUMOR.


OUTCOME:  
1) SUCCESS. PATIENT ALIVE. TUMOR REMOVED.


2) FAIL. PITUITARY HORMONE ACTH STILL HIGH ON POST OP DAYS 5 & 16. TUMOR CELLS PLAYING LETHAL GAME OF PEEK-A-BOO. 


3) FAIL. NOT ONE DAY OF RELIEF FROM CUSHING'S SYMPTOMS. PATIENT CONTINUES STRUGGLES TO FIGHT DAMAGE TO BODY, MIND & SOUL CAUSED BY EXCESS ACTH & CORTISOL PRODUCTION.

4) PATIENT STRUGGLES TO RE-ENGAGE IN LIFE AND SOCIETY WITH MULTIPLE HORMONE- AND VITAMIN-DEFICIENCIES (GROWTH HORMONE DEFICIENCY, VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY, OSTEOPENIA, THYROID DEFICIENCY, FERRITIN (IRON) DEFICIENCY, ACTH EXCESS, CORTISOL EXCESS). 


5) PATIENT DECIDES ON NEXT COURSE OF TREATMENT: 
3RD PITUITARY SURGERY vs. BILATERAL ADRENALECTOMY vs. KORLYM





Structures surrounding pituitary. Important things nearby include carotid artery and optic nerve.
Arrow points to 3 millimeter tumor, right side pituitary; black indented area on opposite side shows space where tumor removed in 1st surgery (6/2009).


Recovery. Swelling but not too bad. Rocking those eye brows and ACTH shadow (acanthosis nigricans). 

Post op day 4 with Lola's blanket. Neurosurgeon deflated,
removed balloons from nose. Balloons measured 4-6 inches.

Crazy nurses insisted on placing an IV here. Btw--my veins are good.



Monday, May 16, 2011

CUSHING’S: Relentless and Nefarious

I am 27 days post op for my second pituitary surgery. I had blood work done on post op day 16 after withholding for 24 hours, aka skipping my afternoon dose of hydrocortisone the day before.  Late last Friday, I received some terrible news from my lab results.  My body is making too much cortisol and ACTH so soon after pituitary surgery.

04/24/2011 post op day 5 @ 8 am (withheld pm dose on previous day)
cortisol 13.6 (4-22)
acth 24 (5-27)
glucose 96 (65-99)
sodium 142 (135-146)


05/06/2011 post op day 16 @ 8 am (withheld pm dose on previous day)
cortisol 17.1 (4-22)

acth 59 (5-27)
glucose 102 (65-99)
sodium 142 (135-146)


       My cortisol increased to 17.1 in the am, and ACTH is more than twice normal. I did capture some high ACTH values prior to my first pituitary surgery, with one high ACTH during the day, and that was 125 baseline for IPSS. Some daytime values were in the high 20s but not like this. My 4 am ACTH in 2007 were 78 and 105.

 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

       My friend Debra reminded me that a cure for Cyclical Cushing’s is very uncertain, often as low as 30% for the first pituitary surgery. She reviewed the medical literature and read every single study she could find on remission after pituitary surgery for Cushing’s. The highest cortisol value she could find that indicated remission was 14 (post op day 5 cortisol level while withholding HC dose for 24 hours). Mine are 13.6 and 17.1.  Debra pointed to this European Journal of Endocrinology article entitled The Prevalence and Characteristic Features of Cyclicity and Variability in Cushing's Disease, which was published in 2009.
       The second pituitary surgery did not cure my Cushing's.  There is no other conclusion. I am just heartbroken and devastated about this medical development, even though I have known it was a possibility since 2007.
Cushing’s patients whose bodies will not stop producing cortisol must remove both adrenal glands in order to ultimately stop all cortisol production at the source. Since high cortisol breaks down many body systems, it just not an option to let Cushing’s keep going.  So, we trade Cushing’s and high cortisol for Addison’s and low cortisol. REPEAT: I will trade the terribly relentless and rollercoaster cortisol levels of Cyclical Cushing's disease for the unpredictable make-no-cortisol-at-all and hope-there-is-no-emergency-or-trauma Addison's.  I am now making plans to have both adrenal glands removed in a procedure called a bilateral adrenalectomy (BLA). NYU’s Department of Surgery posted information on the adrenalectomy procedure.
       Last month, I posted a list of Cushie Warriors – 50 people from around the world who have had to have multiple surgeries in an attempt to rid themselves of Cushing’s. I wish we could get a restraining order for this Cushing’s menace.
       My current dose of hydrocortisone is 15 mg at 8 am and 5 mg at 1 pm.  I will taper that dose responsibly but quickly after speaking to my Cushing’s endocrinologist this Wednesday. 
       That’s all I have to say about that.
        
        Melissa