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Incidental Adrenal Mass. Rebecca Evangelista, MD. Ms. Miller.
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Incidental Adrenal Mass Rebecca Evangelista, MD
Ms. Miller Ms. Miller, a 52 year-old female, was recently evaluated in the ER for vague complaints of abdominal pain. She was discharged with the diagnosis of gastroenteritis but was called by the radiologist two days later because “there is a mass in the gland above my kidney.” She was advised to see a surgeon.
History What other aspects of the history of present illness do you want to know? Make a list of at least three pertinent questions.
History, Ms. MillerConsider the following: Characterization of Symptoms: does she have any symptoms at all? Temporal sequence: has she ever had a CT or ultrasound of her abdomen before? Alleviating / Exacerbating factors: are there any? Associated signs/symptoms: HTN, low potassium, recent weight gain, new onset diabetes, palpitations, flushing? Pertinent PMH:does she have a history of cancer? Relevant Family Hx: does cancer run in her family? Thyroid cancer, parathyroid cancer, cancer of the adrenal gland?
Differential Diagnosis What types of masses are found in the adrenal gland?
Physical Examination What specific aspects of the physical exam would you look for?
Physical Examination, Ms. Miller Vital Signs: BP=156/89, HR=79, RR=14, T=98.9 Appearance: Slightly overweight, well-appearing Relevant problem-focused exam findings Remaining Examination findings non-contributory
Studies What further studies might you want at this time?
Imaging MRI weighted image
Studies – Results Discussion of imaging study What is the differential diagnosis now?
Can you narrow your differential diagnosis? Incidental adrenal masses can be divided into three main categories: Functional Non-functional Neoplastic What else do you need to know in order to make the diagnosis?
Labs ordered, Ms. Miller CBC Chem 12 -look specifically at K+ 24-hour urine for catecholamines and metanephrines Plasma DHEA Low-dose dexamethasone suppression test What type of adrenal mass does each of these specifically test for?
Labs ordered, discussion 1) What else would you order if the low-dose dexamethasone test was positive (i.e. the serum cortisol levels were not supressed by low-dose dexamethasone)? 2) What else would you order if the patient was hypertensive or hypokalemic?
Labs ordered, discussion 1) Plasma ACTH, urine-free cortisol and possible high-dose dexamethasone suppression test cortisol-producing adenoma 2) Plasma aldosterone and plasma renin levels aldosteronoma
Labs ordered/results,Summary Discussion Every person with a new finding of an incidental adrenal mass, or adrenal incidentaloma, of any size, should be worked-up for a functional mass Initial screening lab work should test for aldosteronoma, cortisol-producing adenoma and pheochromocytoma Additional lab work is done if initial screening lab work is abnormal
Scenario 1 Lab results, Ms. Miller All of Ms. Miller’s lab work is normal…what do you recommend? More Studies? Observation? Surgery? Choose one before moving on…
Scenario 1 Recommendation for this 3.5 cm non-functional mass …Observation -for incidental adrenal masses less than 4.5 cm with benign radiographic appearance the current recommendation is observation with repeat CT scan in 6 months…if the mass is stable for 12 months than observation can continue
Scenario 2,Lab results, Ms.Miller She is hypertensive (BP 156/89), her K+=2.2 and plasma: renin >20…what do you recommend? More studies? Observation? Surgery? Choose one before moving on…
Scenario 2 Recommendation for this 3.5 cm functional mass, in this case aldosteronoma …Surgery -Any functional adrenal mass of any size should be excised
Pheochromocytoma Discuss pre-operative preparation Discuss peri-operative concerns
Scenario 3, Lab results, Ms. Miller All lab values are normal but a second opinion of the CT scan is that the mass has irregular borders…what do you recommend? More studies? Observation? Surgery? Choose one before moving on…
Scenario 3 Recommendation for this 3.5 cm suspicious appearing mass in an otherwise healthy patient…Morestudies and Surgery -any non-functional adrenal mass of any size suspicious for malignancy on CT should first prompt focused work-up for a primary malignancy. If the patient is otherwise disease free the affected adrenal gland should be excised
Surgical options Laparoscopic adrenalectomy Open adrenalectomy Which do you recommend to Ms. Miller for each individual scenario?
What next? Discussion of suggested interventions Value of 1 intervention over another? What is EB practice in each?
Surgical Considerations Type Functional Non-functional Neoplastic Size Side Left or right X-ray • OR Choice • Laparoscopic • Open • HAL (Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy)
DiscussionPrimary Adrenal Neoplasm Non-functioning Cortical Adenoma Cyst Myolipoma Ganglioneuroma Hematoma Functioning Cortisol, Aldosterone Pheochromocytoma Neoplastic Primary carcinoma Neuroectodermal Metastatic Lung, Kidney, Breast, GI, Melanoma
Discussion Non-operative management of small incidentalomas follow up imaging in 6 months if no change, may increase interval 10 year follow-up 20% will develop hormone secreting tumor
Management Review For complete review see 2002 NIH Consensus Statement on Incidental Adrenal Masses www.consensus.nih.gov/2002/2002AdrenalIncidentalomasos021PDF.pdf
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