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Drugs and the Treatment of Pituitary Disease

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Title: Drugs and the Treatment of Pituitary Disease


1
Drugs and the Treatment of Pituitary Disease
  • Joe Collier

2
Aims
  • The session will describe
  • how drugs can modify pituitary function,
  • how drugs can be used to treat patients with
    abnormal circulating blood levels of
  • prolactin, growth hormone, testosterone,
    oestrogen and vasopressin.
  • Key pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic
    properties of the drugs will be reviewed, as will
    the main unwanted effects

3
  • At the end of the session you should be able to
    describe
  • how drugs are used to treat patients with
    abnormal circulating blood levels of prolactin,
    growth hormone, testosterone, oestrogen and
    vasopressin.
  • the actions of dopamine agonists
    (bromocriptine), growth hormone and its analogue
    (somatropin) gonadorelin analogues (goserelin),
    somatostatin analogues (octreotide), oestrogen
    receptor antagonists (clomiphene) and
    carbamazepine and the vasopressin analogues
    desmopressin, explaining, where possible, the
    pharmacokinetics of these drugs.
  • briefly their interactions and unwanted effects
    and the principles of their use.

4
Effects of circulating prolactin
  • Prolactin is a 198 amino acid single chain
    polypeptide released from the anterior pituitary.
  • normal (physiological) properties initiation and
    maintenance of lactation (effects on breast
    tissue balanced by oestrogen)
  • pathophysiological effects (as in
    hyperprolactinaemia)
  • infertility (amenorrhoea, anovulatory cycles or
    sperm motility problems, reduced semen volume)
  • lack of libido
  • galactorrhoea
  • gynaecomastia

5
Control of Prolactin Release
  • Primarily through an inhibitory (braking) system
    whereby dopamine released by the hypothalamus
    inhibits prolactin release from the anterior
    pituitary.
  • There is also probably a prolactin releasing
    factor released by the hypothalamus which
    promotes prolactin release from the anterior
    pituitary.

6
Causes of hyperprolactinaemia
  • Anything that reduces dopamine inhibition
  • (hypothalamic disease)
  • (stalk section)
  • inhibitors of dopamine production or release
  • methyl dopa
  • reserpine
  • inhibitors of dopamine receptors
  • antipsychotics (haloperidol, chlorpromazine etc)
  • metoclopramide
  • (pituitary tumour)

7
Reducing Prolactin Levels
  • Stop dopamine antagonist
  • Give dopamine agonist such as bromocriptine (used
    for inhibiting lactation in women not wishing to
    breast feed). Unwanted effects are dose-dependent
    eg nausea, vomiting, hypotension, stroke,
    confusion, dyskinetic movements.
  • Give stilboestrol to potentiate the negative
    oestrogen effect (post partum). The drug must be
    started straight after birth. The risks include
    increased thromboembolism and uterine bleeding.

8
Pituitary Growth hormone (GH)
  • 191 amino acid single chain polypeptide
    synthetic derivative known as somatropin.
  • Control. GH release is regulated by hypothalamic
  • Growth Hormone-Releasing Factor (GHRF synthetic
    derivative known as sermorelin)
  • Growth Hormone-Release-Inhibiting Factor (GHRIF
    or somatostatin synthetic derivative known as
    octreotide)
  • Dopamine which inhibits release

9
Treating GH Deficiency
  • This uses somatropin, produced by recombinant DNA
    technology, with the same amino acid sequence as
    naturally occurring GH, is given by subcutaneous
    or im injection.
  • Uses
  • Children somatropin is given to those with
    pituitary insufficiency and reduced growth
  • In adults somatropin is given to those with
    Turner syndrome and (sometimes) those with GH-
    deficiency syndromes (lassitude, muscle weakness,
    heart failure, diminished bone density). The
    place of GH in adult deficiency syndromes is not
    yet established.

10
Drug treatment of excess growth hormone secretion
  • Bromocriptine (orally up to four times daily,
    which acts as a dopamine receptor stimulant and
    so inhibits GH release. Doses higher than used in
    suppression of lactation and unwanted effects
    more pronounced tolerance to these develops
    with repeated exposure.

11
Drug treatment of excess growth hormone secretion
  • Octreotide. This is a synthetic somatostatin
    given by im or subcutaneous injection three times
    daily (reserved for those in whom surgery or
    bromocriptine are unsuccessful or inappropriate).
    A new depot formulation of octreotide for im
    injection (Sandostatin LAR) needs to be given
    only monthly.

12
Treatment of low levels of testosterone
  • Secondary to hypothalamic disease
  • GnRH (gonadorelin) subcutaneuosly in pulsed doses
  • Secondary to pituitary disease
  • Human chorionic gonadotrophin (this has LH
    activity).
  • Primary testicular failure testosterone
  • oral capsules (twice daily, unpredictable),
  • im injections (every three weeks),
  • subdermal implants (every 4-6 months)
  • skin patches (predicatable, once daily).

13
Treatment to lower testosterone
  • Give synthetic GnRH (gonadorelin) such as
    goserelin as a subcutaneous injection once
    monthly. This initially stimulates LH release
    from the pituitary, then after 2-3weeks,
    inhibits LH release due to receptor
    desensitisation. NB The initial LH release gives
    a testosterone burst (flare) which might need to
    be blocked by a testosterone receptor antagonist
    such as flutamide.

14
Oestrogen
  • Physiological control. Oestrogen is synthesised
    in the ovary in response to follicular
    stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinising
    hormone(LH) released from the anterior pituitary.
    These are synthesised in response to hypothalamic
    Gonadotrophin-Releasing Hormone (GnRH
    gonadorelin). Circulating oestrogen levels
    inhibit gonadorelin release.

15
Oestrogen
  • Raising the levels of LH and FSH so stimulating
    ovulation
  • Give a central oestrogen receptor blocker such as
    the stilboestrol analogue clomiphene (taken
    orally for 5 days).Lowering the levels of
    oestrogens (as for example in endometriosis or
    breast cancer). Give a synthetic gonadorelin such
    as goserelin.

16
Vasopressin (anti diuretic hormone ADH)
  • A nonapeptide synthesised in the hypothalamus and
    subsequently secreted from the posterior
    pituitary in response to increased blood osmotic
    pressure.
  • Pharmacological properties of vasopressin
  • increases permeability of the collecting ducts to
    water so causing water retention (reabsorption).
  • vasoconstriction (arteries, arterioles
    venules).
  • increases gut motility. Note that its effects on
    vessels and tubule are about equal.

17
Diabetes insipidus treatment
  • Desmopressin (desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin -
    ADH activityvasoconstrictor activity 30001)
  • Desmopressin is destroyed in the gut and has a
    half-life of 75min. Give as nasal instillation,
    spray or subcutaneous injection 2-3 times daily.
  • Additional approaches Chlorpropamide (increases
    renal sensitivity to ADH), carbamazepine
    (potentiates release of ADH from pituitary)
    bendrofluazide (paradoxically effects renal
    tubules to cause water retention).
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