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Pituitary tumors and pregnancy.
Authors:D M Magyar  J R Marshall
Abstract:This paper contains a review of the natural history of pituitary tumors in nonpregnant and pregnant patients. Data were drawn from previously published reports and from responses to a questionnaire and were analyzed by life-table techniques. Follow-up of 62 nonpregnant patients with untreated pituitary tumors with and without visual field changes revealed a median time to treatment of 15 1/2 years and similar, relatively constant hazard functions. In 91 pregnancies occurring in 73 women with previously untreated pituitary tumors, ovulation had occurred spontaneously in 9 per cent, headache occurred in 23 per cent, and visual disturbances in 25 per cent with 61 per cent remaining asymptomatic. In those patients who developed symptoms, median time to headache was 10 weeks and to visual disturbance, 14 weeks. The hazard functions were relatively constant and similar. The relative risk of developing symptoms is independent of whether or not the first or second pregnancy occurred in the presence of the pituitary tumor. Of the pregnant patients with previously untreated pituitary tumors, 30 per cent required surgery or radiation therapy. Median time to treatment was 19 weeks. None of the 69 pregnant women without pituitary therapy had permanent sequelae. Only four patients who underwent surgery or received radiation treatment developed permanent symptoms and none was serious. In 78 pregnancies occurring in 73 women with previously treated pituitary tumors, headache occurred in 4 per cent and visual disturbances in 5 per cent. Only one patient required therapy. Treatment during pregnancy results in significantly increased prematurity rates but unchanged abortion and perinatal mortality rates. Small pituitary tumors do not constitute a contraindication to either induction of ovulation or pregnancy.
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