Lack of effect of thyroid hormones on the growth hormone response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in acromegaly

Lack of effect of thyroid hormones on the growth hormone response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in acromegaly

Lack of Effect of Thyroid Hormones on the Growth Hormone Response to Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone in Acromegaly Harold E. Carlson, James R. Sowers...

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Lack of Effect of Thyroid Hormones on the Growth Hormone Response to Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone in Acromegaly Harold

E. Carlson,

James

R. Sowers,

Serum growth hormone (GH) responses to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) were evaluated in 14 patients with acromegaly following treatment with thyroid hormones. After an initial TRH test, seven patients received L-triiodothyronine, 100 fig daily for seven days; the GH response to TRH was not significantly altered by this treatment. Similar findings were noted in two acromegalic subjects who were tested with TRH before and after

and

Robert

W. Rand

longer periods of administration of l-thyroxine. Four of five additional subjects with acromegaly who had received replacement doses of thyroid hormones for an average of 6.6 yr demonstrated GH responses to TRH which were similar to those seen in subjects not receiving thyroid hormones. Acute or long-term administration of replacement doses of thyroid hormones seems to have minimal effect on the GH response to TRH in acromegaly.

P

ATIENTS WITH ACROMEGALY frequently demonstrate increments in serum growth hormone (GH) following administration of thyrotropinreleasing hormone (TRH), according to several recent reports.lm3 Although pretreatment with thyroid hormones will blunt or abolish the thyrotropin (TSH) and prolactin (PRL) responses to TRH in normal subjects,4aS the possible suppressive effect of thyroid hormones on the GH rise following TRH in acromegaly has not been systematically examined. MATERIALS

AND

METHODS

Fourteen patients with acromegaly participated in the study; all gave informed consent to the procedures performed. Seven acromegalic subjects known to demonstrate at least a 50% rise in GH following TRH (subjects l-7, designated group 1) underwent testing with TRH before and after receiving L-triiodothyronine (T3), 25 rg orally four times daily for 7 days. In group II, two subjects (numbers 8 and 9) were tested with TRH before and after receiving more prolonged treatment with L-thyroxine. Five additional subjects in group II (patients 10-14) were tested with TRH only once; they had received thyroid hormone therapy for extended periods of time. Table 1 gives details of the clinical status of both groups of patients. In all cases, TRH testing was performed after an overnight fast; medications other than thyroid hormones and replacement corticosteroids were omitted on the morning of the test. Following the insertion of an indwelling butterfly needle into an antecubital vein, blood samples were collected for hormonal assay before and over a 2-hr period following the intravenous injection of 500 rg of TRH (kindly provided by Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill.). Sixteen normal subjects studied in our laboratory showed no serum GH response to this dose of TRH. Serum GH was measured in a double-antibody radioimmunoassay using reagents provided by the National Pituitary Agency (NIAMDD); the sensitivity of this assay is about 0.3 ng/ml. and

From the Medical and Research Services, Veterans Administration Wadsworth Hospital Center, and the Departments of Medicine and Surgery, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, Cali’ Receivedforpublication August 13, 1976. Supported by Veterans Administration research funds. Reprint requests should be addressed to Dr. Harold E. Carlson, Endocrinology Section, VA Wadsworth Hospital Center, Wilshire and Sawtelle Blvds. Los Angeles, Calif: 90073. Q 1977 by Grune & Stratton, Inc. Metabolism, Vol. 26, No. 7 (July), 15’77

801

41.M

65. M

50, F

5

6

7

i

External

48.M

4

Mean

None

60,M

3

and

SEM for group

irradiation

irradiation

External

irradiation

external

Surgery

irradiation

External

NOW

23.M

2

NOW

Acromegaly

Treatment for

43,M

Age. Sex

1

Group I

Number

Patient

I

Thyroid

9.8

10.0

13.0

6.7 f 2.1 0.1 f 0.08

134*9 328 zt 44

5.9 f 0.9

7.2 + 0.8

8.5 iz 1.4

9.5

8.7

0

13.0 0.5

6.1

1.6

4.8

6.2

7.5

10.0

9.3

11.5

4.5

7.4

(w/ml)

zIPRL

16.4

0

7.0 * 0.9

473

0 3.6

None

5.7

152

0 3.8

T3*

T3*

7.6

5.0

None

130 495

6.4

None

303

92

4.0

334

3.0

160

206

8.0

9.9

1.7

0.3

112

218

9.4

3.0

T3*

T3’

None

f3*

None

T3*

None

f3*

5.1

0

3.1

149

6.1

W/ml)

ATSH

5.5

146 268

7.0

T3 (Wdl)

Basal

T3’

T4 @g/dl)

None

Therapy

Hormone

49*

24

57zt 32 15+4

1

8

188

246

13

19

19

21

54

42

53

16~4

5

5

15

20

9

8

10

9

12

18

34

45

14 33

18 22

-

(w/ml)

AGH

20

in Acromegalic SubjectsPretreatedWith Thyroid Hormones

B.XOl

ResponsestolRH

Daily

fable I. Hormone

2,177 rt 1,131

2,805 i 1,891

2

10,920 8,545 289

532

820 816

994

3,255

2,790

1,318

2,242

768

1,585

(ng minjml)

ARCI

GH Response

g

F

z! u

9 Lz Y

g .=

: A

53, M

49, M

47, F

43, F

40, F

59, M

9

10

11

12

13

14

surgery

surgery

NolIe

irradiation

external

Surgery and

irradiation

external

Surgery and

NolIe

irradiation

external

Surgery and

0.2mg

x 4yr

x 6yr

240mg

Thyroid,

120mg

Thyroid,

x 8yr

x 15yr

0.15 mg x 2 mo

210mg

Thyroid,

90mg

Thyroid,

T4,

x 3mo

0.15 mg x 2 mo

NOW

T4,

*Dosage 25 pg L-T, orally four times daily for 7 days.

33, M

8

Group II

9.2

10.0

9.2

11.0

184

293

166

203

294

0

0

0.2

0

0

0

166

9.0

9.6

148

0

0.5

14.0

167

90

10.8

13.7

5.8

9.3

0.8

14.5

6.3

3.9

6.2

9.9

5.8

0.1

2

1

30

17

58

78

91

9

4

1

5

770

12

72

66

130

9

7

3.5

55

26,618

573

1.905

2,788

6,640

715

580

CARLSON,

804

SOWERS,

AND RAND

Fig. 1.

Mean f SEM serum GH reTRH (500 c(g i.v. at time 0) in sewn patients with ocromegoly

sponses

TIME

the interassay

coefficient

immunoassay

procedure

radioimmunoassays Sinha

et al.,”

of variation of

reported

utilizing

,MIN”TES)

Pekary

samples from a single patient TRH

is S”/,,. Serum et al.,6

supplied

while

TSH

was measured T4

serum

Serum PRL

and

T,

was measured

by the National

according were

t test for paired data.

administration

Integrated

were calculated

to the method

Agency

growth

using previously

to the radio-

assessed in specifc

according

Pituitary

were run in the same assay for each hormone.

sons were made using Student’s for the 2 hr following

7 days.

previously.7

reagents

to

(NIAMDD).

Statistical

hormone

of All

compari-

response areas

described methods.’

RESULTS Group I. In this group of subjects, the maximum increment in TSH in response to TRH (ATSH) was virtually abolished by 1 wk pretreatment with T,, lOOpg/day, while the PRL response (APRL) was slightly but not significantly blunted (Table 1). Mean basal serum GH, however, was unaltered. as were the maximum incremental rise in GH(AGH) and the integrated GH response area (Fig. 1, Table 1). The GH response to TRH was nearly abolished by T, pretreatment in only one subject (number 7). Mean serum T, in group I was slightly lower, while mean serum T, was elevated following the hormone treatment, as expected. Group II. In the two subjects who were tested before and after thyroxine therapy (patients 8 and 9), the GH increment after TRH was minimally altered by the hormone treatment, while the TSH response to TRH was severely reduced (Table 1). In patients 10-14, in whom only one TRH test was performed, GH rises were noted to be similar to those seen in patients not receiving any thyroid hormone, in four of five cases (patients IO-13), while TSH responses were minimal or absent (Table 1). PRL responses in group II were variable. DISCUSSION

In previous studies, the effects of thyroid hormone treatment on the GH response to TRH in acromegaly have been noted only in isolated cases;2,9,‘0 in these instances, no effect was seen. The current, more extensive studies support that view. Neither short-term treatment with TSH-suppressive doses on T3 nor long-term therapy with thyroxine or dessicated thyroid appeared to have any significant effect on the rise in GH seen after TRH in most cases of acromegaly. Although one of five acromegalics who received only a single posttreatment

THYROID

HORMONES

805

IN ACROMEGALY

TRH test failed to show a GH increment (patient 14), it is our experience, as well as that of others, that 107$40% of patients with acromegaly will not of demonstrate a GH response to TRH. ‘J,~,‘OThe lack of significant suppression the PRL response to TRH, which we observed following T, treatment for 1 wk, is not surprising, since longer periods of thyroid hormone administration appear to be necessary for PRL suppression.4xs Thus the neoplastic somatotrophs in acromegaly seem to lack the feedback regulatory system seen in normal thyrotrophs and lactotrophs, in which thyroid hormones exert a suppressive effect on TRH-induced pituitary hormone release;4*s whether this is a concomitant of neoplasia is not yet known. In a practical sense, insofar as the GH response to TRH may be useful in the diagnosis of acromegaly,3,‘0 the present findings indicate that since valid results may be obtained in nearly all subjects receiving full replacement doses of thyroid hormones, such therapy need not be discontinued for testing purposes. ACKNOWLEDGMENT Theauthors wish to thank Jacqueline Briggs, Jung Park, Nancy Meyer, and Alan Reed for skilled technical assistance in the performance of the radioimmunoassays and Anna Lisa Hernandez for typing the manuscript. We are also grateful to the nurses of the Special Diagnostic and Treatment Unit of Wadsworth VA Hospital for assistance with the TRH tests.

REFERENCES 1. lrie M, Tsushima T: Increase of serum growth hormone concentration following thyrotropin-releasing hormone injection in patients with acromegaly or gigantism. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 35:97-100, 1972 2. Faglia G, Beck-Peccoz P, Ferrari C, et al: Plasma growth hormone response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in patients with active acromegaly. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 36:12591262, 1973 3. Samaan NA, Leavens ME, Jesse RH Jr: Serum growth hormone and prolactin responses to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in patients with acromegaly before and after surgery. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 38:957-963, 1974. 4. Refetoff S, Fang VS. Rapoport B, et al: Interrelationships in the regulation of TSH and prolactin secretion in man: Effects of L-DOPA, TRH, and thyroid hormones in various combinations. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 38:450-457, 1974 5. Yamaji T: Modulation of prolactin re-

lease by altered levels of thyroid hormones. Metabolism 23:745-75 I, 1974 6. Pekary AE, Hershman JM, Parlow AF: A sensitive and precise radioimmunoassay for human thyroid stimulating hormone. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 41:676-684, 1975 7. Sowers JR, Hershman JM, Pekary AE, et al: Effect of N”“‘-methyl-thyrotropin releasing hormone on the human pituitarythyroid axis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 43:741748, 1976 8. Sinha YN, Selby FW, Lewis UJ, et al: A homologous radioimmunoassay for human prolactin. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 36:509-516, 1973 9. Gomez-Pan A, Tunbridge WMG, Duns A, et al: Hypothalamic hormone interaction in acromegaly. Clin Endocrinol4:455-460, 1975 IO. Tolis G, Kovacs L, Friesen H, et al: Dynamic evaluation of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (HPRL) secretion in active acromegaly with high and low GH output. Acta Endocrinol 78:251-257, 1975