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Pituitary Tumors Treatment (PDQ®)     
Last Modified: 07/03/2008
Patient Version
Growth Hormone-Producing Pituitary Tumors

Treatment may be one of the following:

  1. Surgery to remove the tumor (usually transsphenoidal surgery).
  2. Drug therapy to stop the tumor from making growth hormone.
  3. Surgery followed by radiation therapy.

Check for U.S. clinical trials from NCI's PDQ Cancer Clinical Trials Registry that are now accepting patients with pituitary tumor 1.



Glossary Terms

drug
Any substance, other than food, that is used to prevent, diagnose, treat or relieve symptoms of a disease or abnormal condition. Also refers to a substance that alters mood or body function, or that can be habit-forming or addictive, especially a narcotic.
growth hormone
A protein made by the pituitary gland that helps control body growth and the use of glucose and fat in the body. Also called somatotropin.
radiation therapy (RAY-dee-AY-shun THAYR-uh-pee)
The use of high-energy radiation from x-rays, gamma rays, neutrons, protons, and other sources to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Radiation may come from a machine outside the body (external-beam radiation therapy), or it may come from radioactive material placed in the body near cancer cells (internal radiation therapy). Systemic radiation therapy uses a radioactive substance, such as a radiolabeled monoclonal antibody, that travels in the blood to tissues throughout the body. Also called radiotherapy and irradiation.
surgery (SER-juh-ree)
A procedure to remove or repair a part of the body or to find out whether disease is present. An operation.
therapy (THAYR-uh-pee)
Treatment.
tumor (TOO-mer)
An abnormal mass of tissue that results when cells divide more than they should or do not die when they should. Tumors may be benign (not cancerous), or malignant (cancerous). Also called neoplasm.


Table of Links

1http://www.cancer.gov/Search/ClinicalTrialsLink.aspx?diagnosis=38812&tt=1&a
mp;format=1&cn=1