TY - JOUR
T1 - Hypothalamic Hamartomas and Sexual Precocity
T2 - Evaluation of Treatment Options
AU - Starceski, Philip J.
AU - Lee, Peter
AU - Albright, A. Leland
AU - Migeon, Claude J.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2015 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1990/2
Y1 - 1990/2
N2 - We describe four male patients with hypothalamic hamartomas associated with sexual precocity. Our assessment of their management suggests that resection using current microsurgical techniques is a valid treatment option if the patient has a normal pubertal endocrine makeup, if the hamartoma is pedunculated, and if the patient is young enough to require years of parenteral medical treatment. Such surgical treatment can be curative, and subsequent growth and development can be normal (patients 1 and 2). However, if the patient is near to pubertal age (patient 3) or if neurosurgical or gonadotropin releasing hormone analogue treatment is not available, the natural history (patient 4) suggests that the only undesirable effects are accelerated growth, tall stature for age, and premature sexual development during childhood, as well as the psychosocial problems that may accompany them. Adult height may be compromised, although the two patients who did not undergo a surgical procedure and did not receive gonadotropin releasing hormone analogue therapy are above the lower limits of the normal range of adult male height. Therefore, if the hamartoma is pedunculated and cessation of pubertal development is desired, resection of the hamartoma is a reasonable therapeutic option.
AB - We describe four male patients with hypothalamic hamartomas associated with sexual precocity. Our assessment of their management suggests that resection using current microsurgical techniques is a valid treatment option if the patient has a normal pubertal endocrine makeup, if the hamartoma is pedunculated, and if the patient is young enough to require years of parenteral medical treatment. Such surgical treatment can be curative, and subsequent growth and development can be normal (patients 1 and 2). However, if the patient is near to pubertal age (patient 3) or if neurosurgical or gonadotropin releasing hormone analogue treatment is not available, the natural history (patient 4) suggests that the only undesirable effects are accelerated growth, tall stature for age, and premature sexual development during childhood, as well as the psychosocial problems that may accompany them. Adult height may be compromised, although the two patients who did not undergo a surgical procedure and did not receive gonadotropin releasing hormone analogue therapy are above the lower limits of the normal range of adult male height. Therefore, if the hamartoma is pedunculated and cessation of pubertal development is desired, resection of the hamartoma is a reasonable therapeutic option.
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U2 - 10.1001/archpedi.1990.02150260105040
DO - 10.1001/archpedi.1990.02150260105040
M3 - Article
C2 - 2105631
AN - SCOPUS:0025177115
SN - 0002-922X
VL - 144
SP - 225
EP - 228
JO - American Journal of Diseases of Children
JF - American Journal of Diseases of Children
IS - 2
ER -