| Literature DB >> 32207261 |
Giuseppe Reimondo1, Alessandra Muller1, Elisa Ingargiola1, Soraya Puglisi2, Massimo Terzolo1.
Abstract
Adrenal masses are mainly detected unexpectedly by an imaging study performed for reasons unrelated to any suspect of adrenal diseases. Such masses are commonly defined as "adrenal incidentalomas" and represent a public health challenge because they are increasingly recognized in current medical practice. Management of adrenal incidentalomas is currently matter of debate. Although there is consensus on the need of a multidisciplinary expert team evaluation and surgical approach in patients with significant hormonal excess and/or radiological findings suspicious of malignancy demonstrated at the diagnosis or during follow-up, the inconsistency between official guidelines and the consequent diffuse uncertainty on management of small adrenal incidentalomas still represents a considerable problem in terms of clinical choices in real practice. The aim of the present work is to review the proposed strategies on how to manage patients with adrenal incidentalomas that are not candidates to immediate surgery. The recent European Society of Endocrinology/European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors guidelines have supported the view to avoid surveillance in patients with clear benign adrenal lesions <4 cm and/or without any hormonal secretion; however, newer prospective studies are needed to confirm safety of this strategy, in particular in younger patients.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenal gland neoplasms; Adrenal incidentaloma; Cushing syndrome; Endocrinology; Practice management, medical
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32207261 PMCID: PMC7090287 DOI: 10.3803/EnM.2020.35.1.26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrinol Metab (Seoul) ISSN: 2093-596X
Comparison among Consensus/Guidelines on Radiological Follow-up
| Consensus/Guidelines | Year of publication | Country | Recommendation/Suggestion | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institutes of Health (NIH) consensus conference [ | 2002 | United States | Repeat a CT scan at 6–12 months. If there is not an increase in size, follow-up should be ended. | |
| Exploration and management of adrenal incidentalomas. French Society of Endocrinology Consensus [ | 2008 | France | Repeat a CT scan at 6 months to rule out the very-low risk of overlooking a malignant tumor. Repeat a CT scan at 2 years and at 5 years to checking for long-term malignant risk. | |
| American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists/American Association of Endocrine Surgeons (AACE/AAES) guideline [ | 2009 | United States | Repeat an imaging at 3–6 months and then annually for 1–2 years | Grade C; Evidence Level 3 |
| Guidelines for the management of the incidentally discovered adrenal mass [ | 2011 | Canada | No further imaging in patients with a benign appearing mass <1 cm or in patients with benign etiologies at discovery (myelolipomas, hemorrhages, cysts). | Grade D; Evidence Level 4 |
| Recommendation | ||||
| Repeat imaging after 12 months (preferably of the same modality used at diagnosis) for masses of 1–2 cm if the clinical picture warrants (consider no follow-up if imaging is stable). | Grade C; Evidence Level 3 | |||
| Repeat imaging after 12 months for masses 2–4 cm: if stable, consider no follow-up while if not stable consider surgical removal or close follow-up (3–6 months). If a mass exhibits an increase in size (greater than 0.5–1 cm) consider surgical removal. | Recommendation | |||
| Italian Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AME) position statement [ | 2011 | Italy | In general, repeat a CT scan at 3–6 months. | |
| No further imaging in patients with small tumors (<2 cm). For larger tumors the decision should be based on the characteristics of the mass, patient age and history, results of endocrine work-up. | ||||
| Adrenal incidentaloma in adults— management recommendations by the Polish Society of Endocrinology [ | 2016 | Poland | If the tumor is small (≤3 cm) and resembles a typical lipid-rich adenoma, imaging tests are recommended annually. In the cases of larger tumors, or those with a less characteristic phenotype, consider imaging check-ups every 3–6 months within the first year, and later every 12 months. | |
| If the lesion is not oncological suspicious and is stable, stop follow-up after 4 years. | ||||
| European Society of Endocrinology/European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors (ESE/ENSAT) guideline [ | 2016 | Europe | No further imaging in patients with an adrenal mass <4 cm with clear benign features on imaging studies. | Weak recommendation; Evidence Level very low |
| Repeat a non-contrast CT scan or MRI at 6–12 months in patients with a mass >4 cm or with indeterminate characteristics at the first imaging. | Weak recommendation; Evidence Level very low | |||
| If there is growth of the lesion less than 20% of the largest diameter during this period, additional imaging after 6–12 months should be performed (in case of growth >20% and at least a 5 mm increase in maximum diameter, the patient should be evaluated for surgical resection). | ||||
| Clinical Guidelines for the Management of Adrenal Incidentaloma [ | 2017 | Korea | No further imaging in patients with an adrenal mass <4 cm with clear benign features on initial work-up. | Recommendation Level C |
| Repeat a CT scan at 3–6 months and then annually for 1–2 years in patients with a mass <4 cm and >10 HU. | ||||
| In case of repeated imaging follow-up, no further exams are required if the tumor does not change in size over a period of more than 1 year, but if a mass with indeterminate radiological features increases in size more than 0.8–1 cm during 3–12 months of follow-up or it changes its appearance, consider an adrenalectomy. |
CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; HU, Hounsfield unit.
Comparison among Consensus/Guidelines on Biochemical Follow-up
| Consensus/Guidelines | Year of publication | Country | Recommendation/Suggestion | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institutes of Health (NIH) consensus conference [ | 2002 | United States | Repeat the hormonal screening (overnight 1 mg DST, urine catecholamines/metabolites) annually, or earlier if clinically indicated, for 4 years. | |
| Exploration and management of adrenal incidentalomas. French Society of Endocrinology Consensus [ | 2008 | France | Repeat the hormonal screening (overnight 1 mg DST, plasma or urinary metanephrines) at 6 months. Then repeat overnight 1 mg DST at 2 years and at 5 years. | |
| American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists/American Association of Endocrine Surgeons (AACE/AAES) guideline [ | 2009 | United States | Repeat the hormonal screening (overnight 1 mg DST, plasma aldosterone concentration and plasma renin activity, plasma free metanephrine and normetanephrine, 24-hour total urinary metanephrines and fractionates catecholamines) annually for 5 years. | Grade C; Evidence Level 3 |
| Guidelines for the management of the incidentally discovered adrenal mass [ | 2011 | Canada | Clinical and hormonal follow-up using screening tests employed at initial evaluation annually for 4 years. Masses exhibiting increasing hyperfunction should be considered for surgery. | Level 3 |
| Evidence, Grade C Recommendation | ||||
| Italian Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AME) position statement [ | 2011 | Italy | Repeat the hormonal screening (i.e., overnight 1 mg DST) in case of development of clinical signs of hormone excess or worsening of the metabolic status and cardiovascular risk profile despite optimal medical treatment. | |
| Adrenal incidentaloma in adults— management recommendations by the Polish Society of Endocrinology [ | 2016 | Poland | Repeat the hormonal screening with the overnight 1 mg DST annually (screening tests for pheochromocytoma may be considered). Stop follow-up after 3–5 years. Patients with suspected subclinical hypercortisolism require more control tests. | |
| European Society of Endocrinology/European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors (ESE/ENSAT) guideline [ | 2016 | Europe | No further hormonal screening in patients with normal hormonal work-up at initial evaluation, unless there are new clinical signs of endocrine activity or worsening of comorbidities (i.e., hypertension and type 2 diabetes). | Weak recommendation; Evidence Level very low |
| Hormonal re-evaluation at any time during the annual clinical follow-up in patient with ‘autonomous cortisol secretion' and in patients with both ‘possible autonomous cortisol secretion' and potentially associated comorbidities. | ||||
| Clinical Guidelines for the Management of Adrenal Incidentaloma [ | 2017 | Korea | In tumors larger than 2 cm, repeat annual hormone tests for 4–5 years to check the functionality of the tumor. | Recommendation Level C |
DST, dexamethasone suppression test.
Fig. 1Flowchart on the radiological follow-up of adrenal incidentalomas. After first radiological evaluation of adrenal masses <4 cm with clear radiological benign features, we suggest no further imaging in patients ages >60 years. For patients aged <60 years, we suggest one single imaging control after 6 to 12 months. After first radiological evaluation of adrenal masses ≥4 cm and/or uncertain radiological features, three possibilities can be considered and should be discussed by a multidisciplinary team: immediate surgery, immediate further imaging with another technique or delayed radiological re-evaluation after 6 to 12 months. If the uncertain nature of the adrenal lesion is confirmed, or if the imaging follow-up shows a growth >5 mm or >20%, surgery should be considered. If no changes of the lesion are observed at 6 to 12 months, radiological follow-up can be continued up to 2 to 4 years, depending on age and comorbidities of the patients, and then stopped if stability of the lesion is confirmed. CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; FDG-PET, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography.
Fig. 2Flowchart on the biochemical follow-up of adrenal incidentalomas. At first evaluation, patients with adrenal incidentaloma should undergo a clinical and biochemical evaluation for hormonal secretion, consisting of 1 mg-dexamethasone suppression test (DST), plasma-free or urinary fractionated metanephrines and aldosterone/renin ratio (ARR) in patients with hypertension or unexplained hypokalemia. If hormonal secretion at diagnosis is excluded, biochemical follow-up is not indicated. In case of overt Cushing's syndrome, pheochromocytoma or primary hyperaldosteronism, surgery should be considered. Surgery can also be considered in patients with autonomous cortisol secretion or possible autonomous cortisol secretion with related comorbidities; if surgery is not performed, patients with possible autonomous cortisol secretion without comorbidities should undergo a clinical follow-up after 12 months with a subsequent biochemical re-evaluation in case of clinical worsening. If the biochemical re-evaluation shows hormonal secretion, surgery should be considered, particularly in patients aged <60 years. In case of clinical and biochemical stability, biochemical follow-up can be stopped after 2 to 4 years.