Combined bromocriptine and growth hormone (GH) treatment in GH-deficient children with macroprolactinoma in situ.

1992 
Experience with PRL-secreting macroadenomas in the pediatric and adolescent population is limited. Although use of synthetic GH after treatment of central nervous system tumors in children without active disease is accepted practice, reports of GH use in patients with central nervous system tumors in situ are rare. Furthermore, the effect of GH on tumor growth is not known. We report GH treatment (10 and 11.5 months), concomitant with bromocriptine (BC; dopamine agonist) therapy in two children, a 15.5-yr-old male and a 15.5-yr-old female, with PRL-secreting macroadenomas in situ. Surgical resection was deemed undesirable because of the risk of major morbidity due to the large size of the tumors and the close proximity to major vessels. Both patients were GH deficient and had heights below the fifth percentile coupled with arrested pubertal progress. During BC therapy, a decrease in tumor size and a reduction in serum PRL levels occurred in both patients, which continued after the addition of GH treatment...
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