| Literature DB >> 28642733 |
Kyoung Jin Kim1, Ji Hee Yu1, Nan Hee Kim1, Young Hye Kim2, Young Sik Kim3, Ji A Seo1.
Abstract
Ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) syndrome is a challenging diagnosis only responsible for approximately 10% of Cushing syndrome cases. It has been associated with a variety of benign and malignant tumors including a carcinoid tumor accompanied by aspergilloma in our case that was significantly difficult to be detected. We report a patient over 70 years old with uncontrolled hypertension and hypokalemia presenting with generalized edema. Laboratory results revealed ACTH-dependent Cushing syndrome, but imaging studies did not show any discrete lesions secreting ACTH. The petrosal to peripheral ACTH gradient resulted in no evidence of pituitary adenoma. As the only lesion suspicious for ectopic ACTH secretion was a right lower round cystic lesion that did not appear to be a carcinoid tumor on computed tomography scan of the chest, the patient underwent video-assisted thoracic surgical resection to provide a definitive diagnosis. The final diagnosis was a small ectopic ACTH-secreting carcinoid tumor with unusual superimposed aspergilloma in the periphery of the lung. Postoperatively, the abnormal endocrine levels were normalized, and all of the clinical symptoms and signs were ameliorated. This is an informative case of ectopic ACTH syndrome (EAS) that was the cause of hypokalemia, hypertension, metabolic alkalosis, and hypercortisolism despite its poorly specific cushingoid morphology and uncommon imaging findings. Therefore, we recommend that clinicians investigate any possible lesion as a potential source of EAS.Entities:
Keywords: Cushing syndrome; aspergilloma; ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone syndrome; hypercortisolism; pulmonary carcinoid tumor
Year: 2017 PMID: 28642733 PMCID: PMC5462915 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Results of laboratory tests.
| Variable | Result | Reference range |
|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin, g/dL | 11.3 | 12.3–15.3 (women) |
| Total leukocytes, /μL (neutrophil %) | 10,800 (83.7%) | 4,000–11,000 |
| Serum potassium, mmol/L | 2.0 | 3.4–5.3 |
| Serum glucose (random), mg/dL | 396 | <140 |
| HbA1c, % | 7.0 | <6.0 |
| Thyroid-stimulating hormone, μIU/mL | 0.2 | 0.17–4.05 |
| Free thyroxine, ng/dL | 1.19 | 0.79–1.86 |
| Upright, plasma aldosterone, ng/dL | 2.1 | 6–25 |
| Upright, plasma renin activity, ng/mL/h | 0.71 | 0.29–3.7 |
| Morning serum cortisol, μg/dL | 43.0 | 9.4–26.0 |
| Morning plasma ACTH, pg/mL | 77.3 | <60 |
| Midnight serum cortisol, μg/dL | 43.2 | <5–7.5 |
| 24 h urine free cortisol, μg/day | 5,380.6 | 35–150 |
| 1 mg overnight DMST cortisol, μg/dL | 43.0 | <1.8 |
| 30.0 | Cortisol >50% suppression after DMST indicating Cushing’s disease | |
| 29.7 | ||
| 464.0 |
ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone; DMST, dexamethasone suppression test.
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Figure 1Computed tomography of the chest demonstrated a round-shaped, poorly enhancing mass with cystic portions measuring 2.7 cm at the right anterior cardiophrenic angle in the axial (A) and coronal (B) images. This lesion was observed on an incidenta abdominal CT scan taken 3 years ago. (C) Magnetic resonance imaging of the chest showed a lobulating mass at the right anterior cardiophrenic angle, with intermediate signal intensity on the T1-weighted image (D) and high signal intensity on the T2-weighted image (E).
Results of inferior petrosal sinus sampling using CRH as a stimulator.
| Peripheral ACTH, pg/mL | Petrosal ACTH (petrosal/peripheral ACTH ratio) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Right, pg/mL | Left, pg/mL | ||
| Basal | 165.1 | 179.4 ( | 181.7 ( |
| Peak | 153.9 | 215.6 ( | 171.6 ( |
ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone; CRH, corticotropin-releasing hormone.
Figure 2The carcinoid tumor (bold arrow) and necrotizing granuloma (thin arrow) were in close proximity [hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stain, ×12.5] (A). The tumor consisted of uniform polygonal cells with a salt–pepper chromatin pattern (H&E stain, ×400) (B). Upon immunohistochemical staining, the tumor was immunoreactive for CD 56 (C), synaptophysin (D), and adrenocorticotropic hormone (E). The Ki-67 index was very low (<2%) (F). A lesion abutting the carcinoid tumor exhibited chronic granulomatous inflammation with necrosis (H&E stain, ×400) (G). Gomori methenamine-silver stain revealed acutely branching and septated fungal hyphae within the necrotic tissue (×400) (H).