RecruitingNCT07268183

How Estrogen Fluctuations Before Diagnosis Affect the Size Prolactin-secreting Tumors

Influence of Pre-diagnostic Estrogen Fluctuations on the Development of Prolactin-Secreting Macroadenomas or Microadenomas: A Comparative Study Conducted at Hôpital Louis Pradel


Sponsor

Hospices Civils de Lyon

Enrollment

180 participants

Start Date

Jan 6, 2026

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Prolactinomas are the most common pituitary adenomas, representing about two-thirds of clinically relevant cases. Their prevalence is around 50 per 100,000 individuals, with an incidence of 3-5 new cases per 100,000 per year and has been rising in recent decades. They may increase morbidity and mortality due to several factors: * Hormone hypersecretion: excess prolactin causes galactorrhea, amenorrhea, and infertility. * Mass effect: macroadenomas can compress adjacent structures, leading to headaches, visual loss, or neurological symptoms. * Treatment complications: medical or surgical treatments may carry risks. A marked sex difference exists, with a male-to-female ratio of 1:5-1:10, and peak diagnosis in women aged 25-44. This disparity disappears after menopause, supporting a potential role of estrogens in tumor development. Lactotrope cells, from which prolactinomas arise, are estrogen-sensitive, unlike other pituitary tumor cells (e.g., somatotrophs, gonadotrophs). A large 2022 prospective cohort (nurses) suggested a possible association between pituitary adenomas and both combined oral contraceptives (COCs) and hormone therapy (HT). However, limitations included self-reported diagnoses, lack of adenoma characterization, and contradictory findings (association with HT but not consistently with COCs). A 2009 case-control study including all adenomas found no link with hormonal contraception, while older studies from the 1980s assessed high-dose contraceptives no longer in use. Microprolactinomas are 4-5 times more frequent than macroprolactinomas (≥10 mm). Distinguishing between the two is essential, as they differ in clinical presentation, prognosis, and sex distribution. Macroadenomas are more common in men, possibly due to delayed diagnosis, as symptoms such as decreased libido are less specific, whereas women often present with amenorrhea or galactorrhea. However, studies suggest tumor size is not directly linked to symptom duration, indicating other factors may explain macroadenoma development. Why some patients develop macro- rather than microadenomas remains unclear. Estrogen exposure is a possible explanation. It is therefore relevant to investigate whether women with macroprolactinomas had greater exposure to endogenous estrogens (early menarche, late menopause, pregnancies, breastfeeding) or exogenous estrogens (contraception, menopausal HT) compared to women with microprolactinomas. The hypothesis is that women with macroprolactinomas were exposed to higher cumulative levels of estrogens before diagnosis than women with microprolactinomas.


Eligibility

Sex: FEMALEMin Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This observational study is investigating whether fluctuations in estrogen levels before diagnosis — for example, related to pregnancy history, contraceptive use, or menstrual patterns — affect the size of prolactin-secreting pituitary tumors (called prolactinomas) at the time of diagnosis. Researchers are comparing women with large prolactinomas (macroadenomas) to those with small ones (microadenomas). No new treatment is being tested — researchers are reviewing existing medical records. **You may be eligible if...** - You are a woman aged 18 or older - You have been diagnosed with a prolactin-secreting pituitary tumor (either a macroadenoma larger than 10mm, or a microadenoma smaller than 10mm) between 2013 and 2023 - Your diagnosis was confirmed by MRI scan and elevated prolactin levels - At least some of your follow-up care was done at the Hôpital Louis Pradel (Lyon, France) **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your pituitary tumor does not secrete prolactin - You have a genetic syndrome predisposing you to pituitary tumors - Your diagnosis is uncertain Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

OTHERStandardized questionnaire

The intervention is a questionnaire which will be administered only if informations available on medical files are not sufficient. 1 mounth before questionning our cases and controls, they will receive a participant information note. It will be administered primarily by telephone. If the patient prefers not to answer by telephone, a paper version will be mailed to her. In this case, she will have up to two months to return the completed questionnaire by post. The questionnaire will collect detailed information on potential exposures to estrogens and reproductive history.


Locations(1)

Hopital Louis Pradel

Bron, Rhone, France

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NCT07268183


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