| Literature DB >> 33815297 |
Aurelio Negro1, Ignazio Verzicco2, Stefano Tedeschi2, Nicoletta Campanini3, Magda Zanelli4, Emanuele Negri5, Enrico Farnetti6, Davide Nicoli6, Barbara Palladini2, Rosaria Santi1,5, Davide Cunzi1,2, Anna Calvi2, Pietro Coghi2, Luigi Gerra2, Riccardo Volpi2, Gallia Graiani7, Aderville Cabassi2.
Abstract
Background: Pheochromocytoma (PHEO) clinical manifestations generally mirror excessive catecholamines secretion; rarely the clinical picture may reflect secretion of other hormones. Watery diarrhea, hypokalemia and achlorhydria (WDHA) is a rare syndrome related to excessive secretion of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). Clinical Case: A 73-year-old hypotensive man affected by adrenal PHEO presented with weight loss and watery diarrhea associated with hypokalemia, hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis (anion gap 15 mmol/l) and a negative urinary anion gap. Abdominal computed tomography scan showed a right adrenal PHEO, 8.1 cm in maximum diameter, with tracer uptake on 68GaDOTA-octreotate positron emission tomography. Metastasis in lumbar region and lung were present. Both chromogranin A and VIP levels were high (more than10 times the normal value) with slightly elevated urine normetanephrine and metanephrine excretion. Right adrenalectomy was performed and a somatostatin analogue therapy with lanreotide started. Immunostaining showed chromogranin A and VIP co-expression, with weak somatostatin-receptor-2A positivity. In two months, patient clinical conditions deteriorated with severe WDHA and multiple liver and lung metastasis. Metabolic acidosis and hypokalemia worsened, leading to hemodynamic shock and exitus. Conclusions: A rare case of WDHA syndrome caused by malignant VIP-secreting PHEO was diagnosed. High levels of circulating VIP were responsible of the rapidly evolving clinical picture with massive dehydration and weight loss along with severe hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis and hypokalemia due to the profuse untreatable diarrhea. The rescue treatment with lanreotide was unsuccessful because of the paucity of somatostatin-receptor-2A on VIP-secreting PHEO chromaffin cells.Entities:
Keywords: arterial hypotension; metabolic acidosis; pheochromocytoma; vasointestinal peptide (VIP); watery diarrhea hypokalemia achlorhydria syndrome
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33815297 PMCID: PMC8010837 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.652045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Abdominal computed tomography scan and Positron emission tomography imaging. Contrast-enhanced abdominal CT scan showed inhomogeneous right adrenal mass measuring 8.1 x 7.7 x 7.9 cm (A). A 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET-CT showed an area of high uptake in the right adrenal gland, with a prevailing peripheral signal and central hypoactivity, and in the lumbar region suspected of adenopathic localization (B, C). A 68GaDOTA-octreotate (DOTATATE) PET confirmed previous localizations and also detected a high uptake are at the base of the left lung (D).
Figure 2Sections from right adrenal gland Morphologic analysis with hematoxylin-eosin staining in (A–D) at different magnification. Panels show a pheochromocytoma, with a typical zellballen pattern of growth (A, 20X), with perivascular cell cuffing around a blood vessel called pseudo-rosette pattern (B, 20X), with neoplastic cells inside vascular spaces (C, 20X), and at greater magnification (D, 40X), an atypical mitotic figure. Positive immunohistochemical staining of Chromogranin A in Panel (E), VIP (F) and anti-Somatostatin Receptor 2A (SSTR2A, H). Double immunostaining showing the co-expression of Chromogranin A (brown) and VIP (red) (G).
Figure 3Metastatic diffusion at chest and hepatic computed tomography scan. Contrast-enhanced abdominal and chest computed tomography scan showed the appearance of multiple metastatic pulmonary and hepatic nodules (A–D).