Hyperprolactinaemia Flashcards
What are the causes of hyperprolactinaemia?
Physiologic:
- Breastfeeding
- Pregnancy
- Stress
Lactotroph adenomas of pituitary:
- Macroadenoma
- Microadenoma
Decreased dopaminergic inhibition of PRL secretion:
- Drugs/dopamine antagonists: haloperidol, respiradone, metoclopramide, domperidone, methyldopa
- Injury to dopamingeric neurons of hypothalamus and pituitary: hypothalamic tumours, sarcoidosis, head injury or surgery, other pituitary adenomas.
Decreased renal clearance of PRL: chronic kidney disease
Describe the pathophysiology of how hyperprolactinaemia causes infertility:
Excess PRL causes negative feedback inhibition of GnRH secretion from hypothalamus and thus decreased FSH and LH secretion.
Mild: insufficiency progesterone and shortened luteal phase.
Moderate: oligo- or amenorrhoea.
Severe: overt hypo-gonadism and hypo-estrogenism (hot flushes, vaginal dryness, amenorrhoea)
What is the possible clinical presentations of hyperprolactinaemia?
- Oligo- and amenorrhoea.
- Galactorrhoea
- Infertility
- May have: headache, visual disturbance, loss of bitemporal visual fields
You suspect a premenopausal woman has hyperprolactinaemia.
Outline the investigations you would order in your work-up:
- Pregnancy test to exclude pregnancy.
- Prolactin level: >30 ng/mL abnormal.
- TSH level: to exclude hypothyroidism.
- Renal function tests: to exclude CKD.
- MRI head to look for pituitary tumour.
- If pituitary tumour, assess for other pituitary hormones: IGF-1, ACTH, FSH and LH.
Outline the first-line treatment option for hyperprolactinaemia including:
- Mechanism of action
- Drug names / doses
- Side-effects
- Follow-up plan
First-line tx: dopamine agonist
Mechanism of action: decreases PRL levels and decreases lactotroph adenoma size.
Drug names/doses:
- Cabergoline 0.25 mg twice WEEKLY or 0.5 mg once weekly. Less nausea.
- Bromocriptine
Side-effects:
- Nausea
- Postural hypotension
- Mental fogginess
Follow-up:
- Review and check PRL level after 1 month: same dose if normal PRL level or have ovulated.
- Check PRL level every 12 months.
- DA should continue for 1 year.
- If after 2 years PRL remains normal or no adenoma on MRI can consider stopping DA.
How would you manage a woman with hyperprolactinaemia wanting to become pregnant?
- Fertility: transphenoid surgery to remove adenoma or ovulation induction with clomiphene or gonadotrophin therapy.
- Stop dopamine agonist when she becomes pregnant; limited safety data but no known adverse effects.
What is pituitary apoplexy?
What symptoms are associated with it?
What complications arise from it
Sudden haemorrhage into the pituitary.
Associated with severe headache, diplopia.
Complications: hypopituitarism and hypotensive crises secondary to ACTH and cortisol deficiency.