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NCT ID: NCT04326569 Not yet recruiting - Pituitary Surgery Clinical Trials

Copeptin in the Diagnosis of Post-operative Insipidus Diabetes After Pituitary Surgery

Copeptin-surg
Start date: June 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Endoscopic trans-sphenoidal pituitary endoscopic surgery is one of the main axes of management of tumours of the sellar region. Central diabetes insipidus is a frequent complication of endoscopic trans-sphenoidal pituitary endoscopic surgery, with a prevalence of up to 30% of cases. It is the consequence of insufficient secretion of the anti-diuretic hormone arginine vasopressin (AVP) by the posterior pituitary (Melmed et al, 2017). In the absence of specific treatment, diabetes insipidus can lead to severe ionic and osmotic disorders, mainly acute dehydration with the risk of severe consequences particularly neurological. Monitoring for the appearance of diabetes insipidus is therefore necessary from the immediate post-operative period. To date, diabetes insipidus is initially suspected before the appearance of major polyuria. Several biological assays (urinary density, natraemia, urinary osmolarity and plasma) can help to confirm the diagnosis, but the sensitivity and specificity of these biomarkers remains quite low for this indication. The determination of MVA is difficult because this hormone is unstable ex vivo. To date, its use in current practice remains complicated. MVA and copeptin are derived from the same precursor and are therefore co-secreted by the pituitary gland in equimolar proportions. Copeptin has a relatively short in vivo half-life of about 25 minutes, as does MVA, but is more stable in vitro when blood has been drawn. Its use in the early diagnosis of diabetes insipidus after pituitary surgery could therefore be of interest.