Pituitary morphologic changes in patients with Erdheim-Chester disease have not been described in detail. We report here the
histologic and immunohistochemical findings in the autopsy obtained pituitary of a 35-yr-old woman with extensively disseminated
Erdheim-Chester disease. The posterior lobe was completely replaced by xanthogranulomatous infiltrates, providing an explanation
for the patient’s diabetes insipidus. The anterior lobe was intact and immunohistochemistry demonstrated expression of GH,
TSH, FSH, LH, and alpha subunit within the normal range. A clinically observed decrease of anterior pituitary function was
interpreted as hypothalamic in origin due to massive destruction of the hypophysial stalk and compression of the hypothalamus.
Prolactin immunoreactive cells were numerous, consistent with the view that prolactin cell hyperplasia resulted from the loss
of hypothalamic dopaminergic inhibition. Massive Crooke’s hyalinization in the ACTH-producing cells was considered unrelated
to Erdheim-Chester disease and was the consequence of treatment with pharmacologic doses of glucocorticoid hormones. It can
be concluded that prolactin cell hyperplasia may be the only finding in the adenohypophysis of patients with disseminated
Erdheim-Chester disease. It appears that in our patient the clinically apparent anterior hypopituitarism was not due to the
lack of storage but rather to insufficient release of adenohypophysial hormones caused by the defect in hypothalamic regulation.
Key Words Erdheim-Chester disease - hypothalamus - immunohistochemistry - pathology - pituitary