ANN DANOFF, MD: I remember the first patient I ever took care of with acromegaly, who just didn't realize that he had a problem. He was an auto mechanic and his kind of understanding about why his hands were getting bigger was because he was using his hands, working on cars all the time.
ANNOUNCER: When a doctor suspects acromegaly, diagnosis is usually quite simple. Blood tests detect elevated levels of growth hormone, and a related hormone called insulin-like growth factor 1, or IGF-1.
When discovered early, treatment with surgery can have a very good outcome.
ANN DANOFF, MD: For the lucky people who have small tumors there's a very good chance of having a surgical cure. So if you've got a small tumor causing acromegaly, something that's caught early, surgery would be a very reasonable first approach.
ANNOUNCER: When the tumor is large, or spread around blood vessels or the optic nerve, surgery is less likely to cure the disease. Doctors sometimes will try radiation therapy. But usually they move on to treatment with medicines. A drug that mimics a naturally-occurring hormone, somatostatin, is often very effective.
DAVID KLEINBERG, MD: Somatostatin normally controls growth hormone secretion. So it is produced in the body and it has a very important mechanism in the normal control of production of growth hormone.
ANN DANOFF, MD: In the situations where surgery is not a cure, somatostatin analogues play a key role in normalizing both growth hormone and IGF-1 levels.