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Acromegaly: Awareness among Health Care Practitioners Redzuan Zarool Hassan, Marianne S Elston Helen M Conaglen, John V Conaglen
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“I suffered for 10 years at least with symptoms of acromegaly before diagnosis was made. Early diagnosis would have saved me much discomfort.” Shared Experiences
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“I have found myself really angry at his (GP’s) dismissive attitude to a lot of my symptoms over the years…I do believe he should have diagnosed my condition earlier.” Shared Experiences
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“I feel most let down by the ENT specialist …who didn't ask about my hands and feet, and simply diagnosed weak vocal chords and sent me to a speech therapist.” Shared Experiences
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Valuable Insight Reflection for learning point, what the system lacks Although rare, acromegaly can impact livelihood significantly Awareness is important
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Background: Acromegaly GH excess Pituitary adenoma Insidious Non-specific symptoms
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Epidemiology Rare Incidence: 3-4 per million per year Prevalence:60 per million Daly et al. 2006 Delay in diagnosis 5–10 yrs after symptom onset Rajasoorya et al. 1994
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Awareness amongst Healthcare Practitioners No reduction in delay of diagnosis 1981-2006 Under-recognition of clinical features Reid et al. 2010
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Effects of Acromegaly 4 Ds: Deformity, Disease, Disability & Death Increased mortality Uncontrolled GH excess: 10 years earlier death Rajasoorya et al. 1994 Multiple comorbidities Heart disease, stroke, diabetes, arthritis, vision problems, sleep apnoea Acromegaly & Body Image study Conaglen, Elston et al. 2015
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Questionnaire Paper & online survey 2012-2014 Waikato Endocrine Clinic patients NZ Acromegaly Society members Aim to identify: Acromegalic signs/symptoms pre-diagnosis Healthcare practitioners the patients encountered Professional groups that missed diagnosis Study Methods
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Demographics Gender n =81
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Age at Data Collection
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Age at Diagnosis
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Period with Symptoms before Diagnosis
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Common Features Pre-Diagnosis Facial feature changes 76% Foot enlargement 82% Hand enlargement 79%
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Features Pre-Diagnosis: Acral Changes Features n (%)<1 year (%) 1-5 years (%) 5-10 years (%) >10 years (%) Foot enlargement 82055368 Hand enlargement 790483914 Glove tightness660542917
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Features Pre-Diagnosis: Acral Changes Features n (%)<1 year (%) 1-5 years (%) 5-10 years (%) >10 years (%) Foot enlargement 82055368 Hand enlargement 790483914 Glove tightness660542917
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Features Pre-Diagnosis: Acral Changes Features n (%)<1 year (%) 1-5 years (%) 5-10 years (%) >10 years (%) Foot enlargement 82055368 Hand enlargement 790483914 Glove tightness660542917
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Features Pre-Diagnosis: Orofacial Changes Features n (%)<1 year (%) 1-5 years (%) 5-10 years (%) >10 years (%) Facial feature changes 796621815 Jaw/forehead enlargement 588522416 Tongue size increase 51864208 Bite change5075320
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Features Pre-Diagnosis: Orofacial Changes Features n (%)<1 year (%) 1-5 years (%) 5-10 years (%) >10 years (%) Facial feature changes 796621815 Jaw/forehead enlargement 588522416 Tongue size increase 51864208 Bite change5075320
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Features Pre-Diagnosis: Orofacial Changes Features n (%)<1 year (%) 1-5 years (%) 5-10 years (%) >10 years (%) Facial feature changes 796621815 Jaw/forehead enlargement 588522416 Tongue size increase 51864208 Bite change5075320
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Symptoms Prompting Diagnosis: Noticed by Self vs. Others
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Questions Arising from Study Are facial feature changes more obvious than acral changes, therefore, noticed earlier? Are facial feature changes less tolerable than acral changes?
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Mass Effects of Pituitary Tumour Headaches 54% Sinus problems 34% Visual disturbance 32% Hearing loss 18%
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Endocrine Disturbance Fatigue 73 % Skin tags 64%Sweating 64% Weight gain 58 %Irregular period 54%Acne/oily skin 47%
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Endocrine Disturbance Hirsutism 36%Muscle gain 30%Hair loss 28% Height gain 16%Impotence 14%Infertility 11%
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Co-morbidities Co-morbidity% Arthritis50 Bowel polyps/cancer43 High blood pressure42 High cholesterol41 Obsructive sleep apnoea35 Diabetes/impaired glucose tolerance29 Thyroid problems28 Carpal tunnel syndrome23
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Co-morbidities Co-morbidity% Arthritis50 Bowel polyps/cancer43 High blood pressure42 High cholesterol41 Obsructive sleep apnoea35 Diabetes/impaired glucose tolerance29 Thyroid problems28 Carpal tunnel syndrome 23
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Co-morbidities Co-morbidity% Arthritis50 Bowel polyps/cancer43 High blood pressure42 High cholesterol41 Obsructive sleep apnoea35 Diabetes/impaired glucose tolerance29 Thyroid problems28 Carpal tunnel syndrome23
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Co-morbidities Co-morbidity% Arthritis50 Bowel polyps/cancer43 High blood pressure42 High cholesterol41 Obsructive sleep apnoea35 Diabetes/impaired glucose tolerance29 Thyroid problems28 Carpal tunnel syndrome23
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Who Prompted Diagnosis?
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Health Practitioners Seen Pre-Diagnosis GP 91% Dentists 42% Eye specialists 33% Endocrinologists 31% Orthopaedic surgeon 24%
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Health Practitioners Seen Pre-Diagnosis Cardiologist 17% Sleep/respiratory specialist 14% Gynaecologist 6.2% ENT specialist 3.8% Gastroenterologist 3.8% Diabetologist 3.5% General surgeon n=2 Dermatologist n=1 Neurologist n=1 Neurosurgeon n=1 Oncologist n=1 Psychiatrist n=1 Rheumatologist n=1
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Who Made the Diagnosis? Group% Endocrinologist29 GP (incl. 2 locums)24 ENT surgeon5 Ortho surgeon5 Neurologist3 Sleep specialist3 Other5 31% saw endocrinologist, 29% diagnosed by endocrinologist 91% saw GPs, 24% diagnosed by GP Can’t evaluate GP’s effort Diagnosis by locum GP NOTE: only included >1%
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Who Made the Diagnosis? Group% Endocrinologist29 GP (incl. 2 locums)24 ENT surgeon5 Ortho surgeon5 Neurologist3 Sleep specialist3 Other5 31% saw endocrinologist, 29% diagnosed by endocrinologist 91% saw GPs, 24% diagnosed by GP Can’t evaluate GP’s effort Diagnosis by locum GP NOTE: only included >1%
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Study Limitations Clinical notes not reviewed re: participant confidentiality Cross-sectional questionnaire – subject to recall bias
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Why is this important?
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Importance of Early Recognition GH level normalisation reduces overall mortality risk Holdaway et al. 2008 Appropriate early treatment Prevent progression of disease Improve quality of life
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Population screening using IGF-1 (DETECT Study, 2008) N = 6773 Only 1.85% with elevated IGF-1 Weakness: uneconomical and unnecessary routing testing increasing patient anxiety Notable Methods of Early Recognition
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Computerized face detection (Miller et al., 2011) Higher accuracy of detection (Schneider et al., 2011) Difficult to apply in GP/dental practices Notable Methods of Early Recognition
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Awareness is Key Simple but practical approach Handouts/publications Awareness campaigns Close relations with local acromegaly societies Emphasis in medical curriculum
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In Summary Delayed diagnosis for many years Acral & orofacial features: most common Shorter duration between onset of orofacial symptoms and diagnosis Multiple comorbidities Better awareness needed Especially primary healthcare practitioners
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Acknowledgements Participants of the study: Waikato Endocrine Clinic New Zealand Acromegaly Society Dr Catherine Chan Dr Marianne Elston Dr Helen Conaglen Prof John Conaglen
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THANK YOU
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