| Literature DB >> 15770213 |
G P Bernini1, A Moretti, C Oriandini, M Bardini, C Taurino, A Salvetti.
Abstract
We investigated the natural course of adrenal incidentalomas in 115 patients by means of a long-term endocrine and morphological (CT) follow-up protocol (median 4 year, range 1-7 year). At entry, we observed 61 subclinical hormonal alterations in 43 patients (mainly concerning the ACTH-cortisol axis), but confirmatory tests always excluded specific endocrine diseases. In all cases radiologic signs of benignity were present. Mean values of the hormones examined at last follow-up did not differ from those recorded at entry. However in individual patients several variations were observed. In particular, 57 endocrine alterations found in 43 patients (37.2%) were no longer confirmed at follow-up, while 35 new alterations in 31 patients (26.9%) appeared de novo. Only four alterations in three patients (2.6%) persisted. Confirmatory tests were always negative for specific endocrine diseases. No variation in mean mass size was found between values at entry (25.4+/-0.9 mm) and at follow-up (25.7+/-0.9 mm), although in 32 patients (27.8%) mass size actually increased, while in 24 patients (20.8%) it decreased. In no case were the variations in mass dimension associated with the appearance of radiological criteria of malignancy. Kaplan-Meier curves indicated that the cumulative risk for mass enlargement (65%) and for developing endocrine abnormalities (57%) over time was progressive up to 80 months and independent of haemodynamic and humoral basal characteristics. In conclusion, mass enlargement and the presence or occurrence over time of subclinical endocrine alterations are frequent and not correlated, can appear at any time, are not associated with any basal predictor and, finally, are not necessarily indicative of malignant transformation or of progression toward overt disease.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15770213 PMCID: PMC2361933 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602459
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Patient distribution on the basis of endocrine alterations. ACTH/Cort=ACTH/cortisol, RAS=renin–angiotensin system, CAT=catecholamines, ANDR=androstenedione and 17OHPG=17hydroxyprogesterone.
Hormonal parameters of our patients at entry and at last follow-up
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| Plasma cortisol (ng ml−1) | 163.7±5.2 | 161.0±5.4 | NS |
| Plasma cortisolo after DXM (ng ml−1) | 25.5±2.7 | 21.6±1.6 | NS |
| ACTH (pg ml−1) | 16.2±2.0 | 18.0±4.1 | NS |
| DHEA-S ( | 0.73±0.05 | 0.75±0.06 | NS |
| Androstenedione (ng ml−1) | 1.43±0.08 | 1.41±0.08 | NS |
| Total testosterone (ng ml−1) | 1.60±0.2 | 1.49±0.2 | NS |
| Free testosterone (pg ml−1) | 3.95±0.9 | 4.5±0.7 | NS |
| 17hydroxyprogesterone (ng ml−1) | 0.90±0.06 | 0.85±0.06 | NS |
| Plasma noradrenaline (pg ml−1) | 375.4±15.8 | 391.9±14.6 | NS |
| Plasma adrenaline (pg ml−1) | 36.7±2.1 | 32.3±1.9 | NS |
| Plasma Renin Activity (ng ml−1 h−1) | 1.13±0.11 | 1.23±0.11 | NS |
| Aldosterone (ng dl−1) | 25.4±1.6 | 23.5±1.0 | NS |
| Plasma potassium (mEq l−1) | 4.0±0.03 | 4.0±0.03 | NS |
The results are expressed as mean±s.e.
NS=not significance.
Altered endocrine picture at entry and/or at follow-up
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| ACTH–cortisol axis | 28 | 23 | 4 | 3 | 18 | 17 |
| Renin–angiotensin system | 18 | 15 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 5 |
| Catecholamines | 9 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 6 |
| Androgens/17OH-progesterone | 6 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 3 |
No suppression of DXM (two cases) and low DHEA-S levels (two cases).
No suppression of DXM (three cases), low DHEA-S levels (10 cases), low ACTH levels (four cases), high cortisol levels (one case).
Low PRA levels (five cases) and high aldosterone levels (three cases).
High androstenedione levels (one case) and high 17hydroxyprogesterone levels (two cases).
The number of patients in whom hormonal alterations were not confirmed at follow-up (n=52) does not correspond to the number reported in the ‘Hormonal picture at last follow-up’ section (n=43), since some patients showed coexistence of more than one hormonal alteration.
Figure 2Estimated overall cumulative risk of adrenal mass enlargement (A) and mass reduction (B) over time in patients with adrenal incidentalomas (n=115).
Figure 3Estimated overall cumulative risk of developing endocrine abnormalities in patients with adrenal incidentalomas (n=115).