Acromegaly is caused by growth hormone hypersecretion, mostly from a pituitary adenoma, driving insulin-like growth factor 1 overproduction. Manifestations include skeletal and soft tissue growth and deformities; and cardiac, respiratory, neuromuscular, endocrine, and metabolic complications. Increased morbidity and mortality require early and tight disease control. Surgery is the treatment of choice for microadenomas and well-defined intrasellar macroadenomas. Complete resection of large and invasive macroadenomas rarely is achieved; hence, their low rate of disease remission. Pharmacologic treatments, including long-acting somatostatin analogs, dopamine agonists, and growth hormone receptor antagonists, have assumed more importance in achieving biochemical and symptomatic disease control.
aCedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA, 90048, USA
bDavid Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Corresponding author. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Boulevard, Davis Building, Room 3021, Los Angeles, CA 90048.