| Literature DB >> 27034920 |
M Pourian1, Davani B Mostafazadeh2, A Soltani1.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Pheochromocytoma is a rare disease but with high mortality if it is not being diagnosed early. Several biochemical tests with high accuracy have been obtained, but the clinical threshold for request of these tests is not determined clearly.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical exam; Likelihood ratio; Pheochromocytoma; Sensitivity; Specificity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27034920 PMCID: PMC4815191 DOI: 10.1186/s40200-016-0230-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Metab Disord ISSN: 2251-6581
Fig. 1The catecholamine metabolism in normal human cells
Fig. 2Systematic review flow diagram
Studies Assessing Clinical Presentations: studies without control group
| Source | Clinical setting, Years | No. of Patients | Age, Mean (Range) | Gender (M, F) | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chung-Yau Lo et al., 2000 | Queen Mary hospital, Hong Kong, China, 1981–1998 | 29 (24 diagnosed in life, 4 postmortem, 1 operated with an unexpected diagnosis | Median = 50 (18–75) | 11,18 | [ |
| M. Mannelli et al., 1999 | 18 centers from all over Italy, 1978–1997 | 258 | 44 (8–84) in female | --- | [ |
| 46(12–79) in male | |||||
| Gennaro Favia et al., 1998 | A university endocrine surgery unit, Italy, 1977-1996 | 55 | 41 (10–63) | 28,27 | [ |
| Gunnar Stenstrom et al., 1988 | A university hospital, Sweden, 1956–1982 | 64 | 45 (15–79) | 30,34 | [ |
| J.W. Lance and Hinterberger, 1976 | A University Hospital in Sydney, Australia | 27 | 9–54 | 14,13 | [ |
| Patócs et al., 2004 | Faculty of Medicine, Semmelweis University in Budapest, Hungary. 1995–2003 | 41 | (20–73) | 11,30 | [ |
| FC Hernandez et al., 2000 | University Hospital “Virgen de la Arrixaca”, Murcia, Spain. 1994–1998 | 57 | 42 (7–71) | 34,23 | [ |
| Laurence Amar et al., 2005 | Referral to a Hypertension unit, France, 1975–2003 | 192 | 44 | 89,103 | [ |
| K.C. Loh et al. 1997 | Endocrine clinics, Nova Scotia, Canada, 1986–1995 | 18 | 42 (12–81) | 3,15 | [ |
| Charles AG Proye et al., 1994 | 3 medical centers, France, 1951–1992 | 310 | --- | --- | [ |
| P.F. Plouin et al., 1997 | A hospital in Paris, France, 1975–1994 | 129 | 42.6 (13–80) | 63,66 | [ |
| Roger R. Perry et al., 1990 | Surgery branch of National cancer instate, Maryland, USA, 1982–1989 | 25 (extra-abdominal and 1 incidental discovery were excluded) | 39.6(16–74) | 6,19 | [ |
| TD O’halloran et al., 2001 | St. Vincent hospital Ireland, 1950–1997 | 33 | 40.6 (12–74) | 9,24 | [ |
| Aguilo et al., 1991 | University hospital, Puerto Rico, 1970–1990 | 24 (19 diagnosed clinically and 5 post-mortem) | 43.2 (17–74) | 14,10 | [ |
| J.E. Thomas et al., 1966 | Mayo clinic, USA. 1945–1964 | 100 (97 in life and 3 autopsy) | 41 (4–67) | 42,58 | [ |
| Robert Kopetschke et al., 2009 | 4 endocrine centers, Germany, 1973–2007 | 183 | 12–85 | --- | [ |
| C. Charles et al. 1984 | A university hospital, Jamaica, 1963–1983 | 16 | 38 (13–66) | 8,8 | [ |
| Wei-ber Liao et al., 2000 | Chang Gung memorial hospital, Taiwan, 1993–1997 | 25 | 49 (16–68) | 14-11 | [ |
| Joyce SY Yau et al. 2010 | endocrine clinics of the Kowloon West Cluster hospitals, china. 1994–2003 | 17 (19 at first. 2 lost to follow up) | 47 (17–72) | 6,11 | [ |
| Van Duinen et al. 2010 | Leiden university medical center, Netherland, 1975–2008 | 28 patients whom the pheochromocytoma was diagnosed based on signs and symptoms | 47 | --- | [ |
| Bernard Goldny et al., 2001 | Department of General Surgery of the University of Munster Hospital, Germany. 1967–1998 | 133 | 41.4 (2–75) | 68,65 | [ |
| I.M. Modlin et al. 1979 | A number of hospitals, England, 1955–1976 | 72 (58 diagnosed in life) | --- | [ | |
| E. J. Ross and Griffith 1989 | 3 hospitals, London, England, 1952–1982 | 54 | 12–74 | 16,38 | [ |
| Ulf Niemann et al., 2002 | University hospital, Germany. 1974–2000 | 87 | 49 (14–78) | 38,49 | [ |
| Takyo Noshiro et al., 2000 | Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan. 1957–1995 | 95 (2 autopsy) | --- | 43,52 | [ |
| Richard E. Goldstein et al.,1999 | 2 medical centers, Tennessee, USA, 1950–1998 | 84 | 42 (9–79) | 38,66 | [ |
| Khoram manes et al. 2005 | Sahlgrenska University Hospital. western region of Sweden. 1950–1997 | 121 | 47 (7–71) | 53,68 | [ |
| N. Sharma et al., 2001 | Tertiary care hospital, Chandigarh, India, 1989–1996 | 30 | 24 (17–31) | 17, 13 | [ |
| Masky P et al. 2012 | Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu, Nepal. 2008–2011 | 12 | 36 (12–65) | 5,7 | [ |
Studies Assessing Clinical Presentations: studies with control group
| Source | Clinical setting, Years | No. of Patients | Age, Mean (Range) | Gender (M, F) | Control group | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plouin et al., 1981 | Hypertension service, saint-Joseph hospital, Paris, France, from 1977 | 2585 hypertensive patients (11 of them were found to have pheochromocytoma) | 33–60 | 1443,1142 | All of the 2585 patients are considered control group as the proportion of pheochromocytoma is 0.4 % | [ |
| Peter P. Stein et al. 1991 | Yale university school of medicine, USA. | 30 episodes (29 patients), 28 controls | 37 (18–65) | 13,16 | Yesa | [ |
| 43 (20–65) | 16,12 | |||||
| Henry R. Black et al. 1984 | 11 new England hospitals, USA, 1962–1980 | 53 patients (60 first. 5 excluded because of finding based on predisposition genetic factor. 1 excluded because of being asymptomatic and tumor found at autopsy) 25 controls | 41 (13–85) | 27, 26 | Yesb | [ |
| 39.3 (19–85) | 14,11 | |||||
| P.F. Plouin et al., 1988 | Hypertension departments of 2 hospitals, Paris, France, 1976–1985 | 39 patients | --- | Yes (21 patients with essential hypertension) | [ | |
| 21 controls | ||||||
| Václavík J et al. 2007 | Sternberk Hospital, Sternberk, Czech Republic. | 14 patients | 58 (37–74) | 6,8 | Yesc | [ |
| 214 controls | 57 (16–84) | 86,128 | ||||
| Run Yu et al. 2007 | An academic hospital, Los Angeles, USA 1997–2007 | 40 patients | 54(10–78) | 16,24 | Yes (patients with over-diagnosed pheochromocytoma) | [ |
| 9 controls | 57 (36–82) | 2,7 | ||||
| Yu R et al. 2010 | Division of Endocrinology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. 2000–2008 | 13 patients | 53 (23–86) | 6,7 | Yes (24 patients with highly elevated biochemical tests but pheochromocytoma was ruled out) | [ |
| 24 controls | 59 (28–82) | 10,14 |
a28 (a pheochromocytoma was considered but excluded if any 1 of several conditions were met: 1) repeatedly normal urine collections for catecholamine metabolites (VMA or MN) and urine free catecholamines (UFC) and no diagnosis of pheochromocytoma after 2 years of follow up; 2) negative imaging studies (CT, MRI or MIBG) and no diagnosis of pheochromocytoma after 2 years of follow up; 3) resolution of the clinical symptoms and/or alternate diagnosis, explaining the symptoms, established.)
bPatients highly suspected to have pheochromocytoma in whom the diagnosis was ruled out by negative arteriograms and no evidence of disease after at least 18 months follow-up
c213 patients screened for resistant or markedly accelerated hypertension, paroxysmal hypertension, and ‘flushes’ and, in a small proportion, for adrenal incidentaloma or genetic predisposition to pheochromocytoma. in who diagnose was not confirmed by long-term follow-up or use of imaging techniques
Sensitivity of signs and symptoms
| Sign/symptom | No. of studies report | Pooled sensitivity (Random effects) (%) | 95 % CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headache | 25 | 60.4 | 53.2–67.4 |
| Palpitation | 19 | 59.3 | 51.9–66.6 |
| Diaphoresis | 28 | 52.4 | 0.457–59.1 |
| Triad | 8 | 58 | 28.6–84.7 |
| Spells | 7 | 57.5 | 33.9–79.3 |
| HTN(total) | 23 | 80.7 | 74.7–85 |
| HTN(sustained) | 9 | 36.3 | 20.5–53.9 |
| HTN (paroxysmal) | 9 | 36.5 | 24.6–49.3 |
| HTN (paroxysms on sustained) | 4 | 29.4 | 17.3–43.1 |
| Chest pain | 16 | 17.3 | 11.4–24.2 |
| Abdominal pain | 11 | 16.5 | 11.9–216 |
| Flank pain | 2 | 5.2 | 20.7–9.6 |
| Dyspnea | 10 | 23.4 | 16.2–31.5 |
| Anxiety | 14 | 28.6 | 22.9–34.7 |
| Constipation | 4 | 13.8 | 32.2–29.9 |
| Diarrhea | 2 | 4 | 0.8–9.4 |
| Dizziness | 11 | 17.7 | 13.5–22.3 |
| Flushing | 14 | 15 | 9.3–21.7 |
| Pallor | 7 | 31.6 | 17.3–47.9 |
| Nausea/Vomiting | 14 | 21.2 | 16–26.7 |
| Paresthesia | 4 | 13.6 | 10–17.8 |
| Tremor | 10 | 20.2 | 14.5–26.6 |
| Visual disturbance | 7 | 9.6 | 5.6–14.6 |
| Weakness/Fatigue | 8 | 23.8 | 15.7–33.9 |
Sensitivity of orthosthatic hypotension based on different definitions in studies
| Study (number of patients) | Definition of OHa | Sensitivity (%) |
|---|---|---|
| M. Mannelli et al. (156) | falling SBP > 30 mmHg or falling DBP > 20 mmHg | 23 |
| N. Sharma et al. (30) | fall in SBP > 20 mmHg | 50 |
| Baguet et al. [ | fall in SBP > 20 or fall in DBP > 10 1 min after standing | 36.6 |
| Plouin et al. (39) | fall in SBP > 10 mmHg | 36 |
a OH Othostatic Hypotension, SBP systolic blood pressure, DBP diastolic blood pressure
Pooled estimation of LR for symptoms and signs of pheochromocytoma
| Sign/symptom | Number of studies | LR+ (95%CI) | LR- (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Palpitation | 2 | 1.888 (1.161–3.073) | 0.518 (0.333–0.806) |
| Diaphoresis | 2 | 2.184 (1.411–3.382) | 0.451(0.310–0.657) |
| Classic triada | 2 | 6.312 (0.217–183.217) | 0.139 (0.059–0.331) |
| Hypertension | 5 | 0.762 (0.562–1.033) | 1.682 (1.093–2.589) fixed effect |
| Weakness/fatigue | 2 | 1.123 (0.658–1.919) | 0.964 (0.772–1.205) |
| Anxiety | 2 | 1.127 (0.500–2.541) | 0.933 (0.635–1.369) |
| Headache | 2 | 1.607 (1.124–2.297) | 0.240 (0.094–0.613) |
| Flushing | 2 | 0.283 (0.058–1.391) | 1.466 (0.754–2.850) |
| Spells | 1b | 0.93 | 1.16 |
| Pallor | 1 | 4.667 | 0.718 |
| Diarrhea | 1 | 0.311 | 1.188 |
| Constipation | 1 | 0.156 | 1.230 |
| Dizziness | 1 | 0.431 | 1.493 |
| Paresthesia | 1 | 1.867 | 0.933 |
| Tremor | 1 | 0.560 | 1.096 |
| Orthostatic hypotensionc | 1 | 1.885 | 0.792 |
aIn all but classic triad, the control group was highly suspected but ruled out pheochromocytoma. In the classic triad, the control groups were patients with hypertension
bThese symptoms were evaluated in Stein’s article [16]
cThe definition of orthostatic hypotension in Plouin study was falling SBP >10 mmHg, and the control group was patients with essential hypertension
Two studies of P.F. Plouin for evaluating classic triad in diagnosis of pheochromocytoma
| Authors, number of patients and control group | TP | FP | FN | TN |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P.F. Plouin et al. 1988, | 35 | 7 | 4 | 14 |
| Plouin et al. 198l, | 10 | 160 | 1 | 2414 |
TP True Positive, FP False Positive, FN False Negative, TN True Negative
| Pheochromocytoma | |||
| + | - | ||
| Symptom/sign | + | TP | FP |
| - | FN | TN | |