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Benign neoplasm of adenohypophysis
Upward extension of macroadenoma = most common suprasellar mass in adults
Best imaging technique
MR with sagittal/coronal thin-section imaging through sella + T1 C+ with FS
Sellar mass without separate identifiable pituitary gland = macroadenoma
Mass is pituitary gland
Usually isointense with gray matter
Enhance strongly, often heterogeneously
Cavernous sinus invasion difficult to determine
Pituitary hyperplasia
Saccular aneurysm
Meningioma (diaphragma sellae)
Metastasis
Lymphocytic hypophysitis
Craniopharyngioma
WHO grade I
MIB-1 > 1% suggests early recurrence, rapid regrowth
Invasive adenoma > > pituitary carcinoma (rare)
Beware: Adenoma-like mass in adolescent/prepubescent boys may represent hyperplasia secondary to end-organ failure
Prolactin-secreting adenoma is most common functional adenoma
No matter how aggressive/invasive it looks, pituitary tumors are almost never malignant
Macroadenoma, pituitary adenoma, prolactinoma
Benign neoplasm of adenohypophysis
Best diagnostic clue
Sellar mass without separate identifiable pituitary gland; mass is gland
Location
Most common: Intra- or combined intra-/suprasellar
Upward extension of macroadenoma = most common suprasellar mass in adults
Uncommon: Giant adenoma
May invade skull base, extend into anterior/middle/posterior fossae
Can mimic metastasis or other malignant neoplasm
Rare: “Ectopic” pituitary adenoma
Sphenoid sinus most common
Cavernous sinus, clivus, 3rd ventricle, infundibulum
Size
> 10 mm
“Giant”: > 4 cm in diameter (< 0.5%)
Morphology
Most common: “Figure 8” or “snowman”
Indentation: Dural constriction caused by diaphragma sellae
Less common: Multilobulated margins
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