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1 Division of Clinical and Molecular Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
2 VA Health Services Research and Development Center for Quality Improvement Research, Louis Stokes Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 10701 East Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to D C Aron, Email: david.aron{at}med.va.gov)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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| The magnitude of the problem |
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The differential diagnosis of an incidentally discovered mass is extensive (Table 1
), but most are nonsecreting cortical adenomas. In a recent systematic review that combined studies using the broadest definitions, adenomas accounted for 41%, metastasis 19%, adrenocortical carcinoma 10%, myelolipoma 9% and pheochromocytoma 8%, with other usually benign lesions such as adrenal cysts comprising the remainder (Aron 2002, Lau et al. 2002). It is evident that this distribution will vary as other inclusion and exclusion criteria are applied; that is, metastasis becomes much less common when patients with known extra-adrenal cancer are excluded. The development of a regional, national or international registry that utilized uniform operational definitions would go a long way toward clarifying these differences. The size of the lesion affects the distribution of etiologies: larger tumors are more likely to be malignant than smaller ones (Vierhapper & Heinze 2005). Among lesions larger than 6 cm, adrenal carcinomas comprised 25% and metastasis 18%, while adenomas accounted for only 18% (Lau et al. 2002); for tumors under 4 cm, adrenal carcinomas comprised 2% and adenomas 65%; and for tumors of 46 cm, adrenocortical carcinoma constituted 6% (Lau et al. 2002). Bilateral adrenal masses are found in about 1015% of cases. When masses are bilateral, several diagnoses are more likely, including metastatic disease, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, lymphoma, infection (e.g., tuberculosis, fungal), hemorrhage, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-dependent Cushings syndrome, pheochromocytoma, amyloidosis and infiltrative disease of the adrenal glands.
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| Imaging of adrenal incidentaloma |
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The CT scan is most commonly used in the assessment of AI. Adrenal adenomas are usually small, well-defined homogeneous lesions, with evident margins and large intracytoplasmic lipid content. The presence of hemorrhage, calcifications or necrosis is common but nonspecific. Large size, irregular shapes, vague contour, invasion into surrounding structures and high signal intensity usually denote malignancy (Angeli et al. 1997). However, size as such cannot be used to distinguish malignant from benign lesions with 100% accuracy (Lee et al. 1991, Singer et al. 1994, van Erkel et al. 1994, McNicholas et al. 1995, Szolar & Kammerhuber 1998). Signal intensity can be very useful. High signal intensity can be expressed in either Hounsfield units (HU) (with an intensity higher than 10 or 20 units being used as diagnostic threshold) or in signal-lesion (SL) to signal-fat (SF) ratio (with SL/SF ratio above 1.5 suggesting malignancy). The threshold used determines the sensitivity and specificity of the test. At low threshold, sensitivity for malignancy is around 0.9 and specificity around 0.4 (Kievit & Haak 2000). Higher thresholds lead to better specificity (around 0.9), but with lower sensitivity (around 0.55) (Hamrahian et al. 2005). More recently, excellent results have been observed for the identification of adenomas by 1015-min-delayed enhanced CT, since that adenomas are characterized by rapid washout of IV contrast. Using this method, a washout of 4050% is highly suggestive of a benign mass with sensitivity and specificity of 96% and 100% respectively, whereas low washout percentages strongly suggest metastasis (for an overall accuracy of 96%) (Korobkin et al. 1996, 1998, Boland et al. 1997, 1998, Caoili et al. 2000, 2002).
The accuracy of MRI to the differentiation between benign and malignant tumors is comparable to that of CT scan. Usually, malignant masses are hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images, with strong enhancement after contrast injection and delayed washout. More recent studies have used the lipid content of adenomas, which causes a loss in signal intensity on chemical-shift MRI (Outwater et al. 1995, 1996). However, MRI may be helpful in the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma, where it outperforms CT scanning. High signal intensity on T2-weighted MRI is suggestive of pheochromocytoma and originally was claimed to have nearly 100% accuracy (van Gils et al. 1991, van Erkel et al. 1994). Later studies have corrected this overoptimistic perspective (Varghese et al. 1997, Honigschnabl et al. 2002). By combining data from several studies, sensitivity and specificity of T2-weighted MRI for pheochromocytoma were estimated at approximately 92% and 88% respectively (Kievit & Haak 2000). If such accuracy were indeed true, this would make T2-weighted MRI more accurate for diagnosing pheochromocytoma than some of the biochemical assessments.
| Functional evaluation |
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Pheochromocytomas are a frequent cause of clinically silent adrenal masses; they constitute about 8% of patients with AI. Among patients referred to the Mayo Clinic for management of adrenal pheochromocytoma, 10% were discovered in the course of evaluation for AI (Young 2000). The classic features of pheochromocytoma are well known (headache, palpitations, diaphoresis, anxiety and sustained or paroxysmal hypertension), but most patients with AI proven later to harbor a pheochromocytoma lack those features, and the diagnosis is readily missed or delayed. In one study, there was a mean interval of 42 months between initial presentation and diagnosis; The delay was as long as 30 years (Mannelli et al. 1999). These silent pheochromocytomas may also be lethal.
Clinical diagnosis of pheochromocytoma may be difficult. Even if careful history does not reveal the classic triad (headache, palpitations and diaphoresis) and even if physical examination demonstrates normotension, the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma cannot be excluded, with certainty. Positive and negative likelihood ratios are 40 and 0.36 respectively, increasing the probability of a pheochromocytoma from 3.5% to around 60% in case of a positive triad, and reducing it to 1% in case of its absence (and changing from a prior probability of 8%, as reported by Lau et al. (2002), to either 78% or 3%) (Kievit & Haak 2000). Hypertension provides even less reliable information, with positive and negative likelihood ratios of 2 and 0.6, changing the probability of a pheochromocytoma to 75% or 2% in the presence or absence of hypertension (or, again, from 8% to 15% and 5% respectively). Hormonal testing for urinary or plasma metanephrines count among the most reliable tests, with both sensitivity and specificity of around 95% (Lenders et al. 2002). Testing for urinary catecholamines and vanillymandelic acid (VMA) is less reliable, because of dangerously low test sensitivities of 8085% (Mantero et al. 1997). Given the potential usefulness of T2-weighted MRI, a practical approach for ruling out pheochromocytoma would be a normal plasma or, if such testing were not available, urine metanephrine test, especially when combined with a negative T2-weighted MRI or positive testing for cortical hormonal hyperactivity.
Cortisol-secreting masses
Subclinical autonomous glucocorticoid hypersecretion (SAGH) has been found in 547% of patients with AI, in several studies using different study protocols and diagnostic criteria (Reincke et al. 1992, Angeli et al. 1997, Terzolo et al. 1998, Barzon & Boscaro 2000, Reincke 2000, Rossi et al. 2000). This autonomous hypersecretion is subtle and may be transient. These wide differences in prevalence are due to, among other things, lack of standardized criteria for diagnosis (Lau et al. 2002). These patients do not show clinical pattern of overt Cushings syndrome. Rather, they exhibit abnormal regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. They also have a high prevalence of obesity, hypertension, diabetes and insulin resistance. Abnormalities in bone turnover and bone mass have been reported as well (Torlontano et al. 1999, Tauchmanova et al. 2001, Francucci et al. 2002). In a recent study, involving 70 women with AI and 84 controls, evaluated by qualitative CT, the prevalence of vertebral fractures in pre- and postmenopausal AI patients, was significantly higher than in controls (Chiodini et al. 2004). Tauchmanova et al. (2002) used the criteria of the National Italian Group on Adrenal Tumors (AI-SIE) for SAGH: absence of clinical signs of cortisol excess and two abnormalities in the regulation of the HPA axis; failure to suppress serum cortisol to less than 83 nmol/l (3 µg/dl) by 2 mg dexamethasone; and the combination of a low-ACTH, high urinary free cortisol and blunted response to corticotropin-releasing hormone. In a study involving 28 consecutive patients and 100 age-, sex-, and body-mass index-matched controls, blood pressures (systolic and diastolic) were higher in patients than in controls. Similarly, higher levels of fasting glucose, insulin, total cholesterol and triglycerides were found in the patients with AI. In addition to increased insulin resistance, the AI patients had increased waist-to-hip ratios and high frequencies of hypertension (61%), lipid abnormalities (71%), and impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes (64%); 85% had multiple cardiovascular risk factors. Evidence of cardiovascular disease was present in a high proportion of patients, based not only on clinical evidence, but also on electrocardiogram, or carotid ultrasound examination. The degree to which these findings have impact on long-term morbidity of patients with SAGH remains to be determined. However, these metabolic abnormalities may improve after removal of the AI (Emral et al. 2003).
The transition from normal cortisol-ACTH feedback to completely autonomous cortisol production with cortisol hypersecretion is a continuum, but the point on this continuum that produces clinical morbidity is not clear. Tsagarakis et al. (1998) performed the dexamethasone suppression test in 61 patients with incidentally discovered adrenal masses. In a post-hoc analysis, patients were divided into three groups: patients with a post-dexamethasone level of cortisol of >70 nmol/l (group A, n=19), 3070 nmol/l (group B, n=27) and <30 nmol/l (group C, n=15). Group A patients had significantly higher cholesterol and triglycerides concentrations than group C patients. In addition, the natural course of patients with SAGH is unknown. Of particular concern is the risk of progression to overt Cushings syndrome. Barzon and colleagues followed 130 nonoperated patients for at least 1 year. The cumulative risk for a nonsecreting adrenal incidentaloma to develop subclinical hyper-function was 3.8% after 1 year and 6.6% after 5 years. Of the 122 patients without subclinical autonomous cortisol secretion at initial AI diagnosis, three developed overt Cushings syndrome after 13 years (Barzon et al. 1999, 2002, Barzon & Boscaro 2000). In addition, one patient with autonomous cortisol secretion at initial diagnosis developed overt Cushings syndrome. Thus, for patients with masses with SAGH, estimated cumulative risk to develop overt Cushings syndrome was 11% after 1 year and 26% after 5 years.
SAGH
Diagnostic assessment of adrenocortical function is more easily resolved than that of adrenomedullary function, with the dexamethasone suppression test being the standard evaluation for subclinical autonomous cortisol hypersecretion; because pituitary ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism is not expected, the issue of false-negative tests is of much less concern (Terzolo et al. 1998). With dexamethasone suppression testing, a suppressed plasma cortisol at 8 am after 1 mg (or more) of dexamethasone rules out a cortisol-secreting adrenal tumor. The criterion for suppression is dependent upon the cortisol assay, but, typically, a value of <3 µg/dl would be considered adequate suppression. Inadequate suppression should be followed up with other tests: high-dose (8 mg) dexamethasone suppression test, high midnight cortisol levels and suppressed morning ACTH levels (should be measured at the same time as cortisol). The urinary free cortisol may be normal or slightly elevated and is thus less useful diagnostically. Salivary cortisol, although known to reflect plasma free cortisol better than the total plasma cortisol levels, has not yet been evaluated for SAGH (Findling & Raff 2001).
Aldosteronoma
The prevalence of mineralocorticoid-secreting mass in patients with AI is estimated at 1.63.8% (Barzon et al. 1998, Murai et al. 1999, Mantero et al. 2000). Hypertension with spontaneous hypokalemia (<3.5 nmol/l) was considered to be the hallmark of this entity, but normokalemic patients with primary hyperaldosteronism appear at a frequency 738% higher than previously thought (Stowasser 2001, Stowasser et al. 2003). Bernini et al. (2002), in their study, found primary hyperaldosteronism in 4% of patients who had an AI and were normokalemic, and in 5.5% of those with AI and hypertension. For those AI patients with hypertension, serum potassium and a plasma aldosterone concentration to plasma renin activity ratio (PAC-PRA) should be measured. A PAC-PRA greater than 30, and a PAC over 0.5 nmol/l is highly suggestive of autonomous aldosterone production (Grumbach et al. 2003). Additional testing should be done for confirmation of positive screening test results.
| Malignancy |
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Adrenocortical carcinoma
The most feared diagnostic possibility for AI is adrenal cancer, because of its poor prognosis, with a mean survival of approximately 18 months and 5-year survival of approximately 16% (Icard et al. 1992, Boscaro et al. 1995). These tumors can be functional or nonfunctional, with functional tumors accounting for 2694%; frequently, the steroids synthesized have low biologic activity (Wooten & King 1993, Wajchenberg et al. 2000). Hypercortisolism, which can lead to Cushings syndrome, or a mixed Cushing-virilizing syndrome, is more common than virilization by androgen-secreting tumors (Del Gaudio & Del Gaudio 1993, Wajchenberg et al. 2000). Estrogen-secreting tumors causing feminization are rare, as are aldosterone-secreting carcinomas. Fortunately, clinically diagnosed cases of primary adrenal carcinoma are rare; the prevalence of adrenal carcinoma in general is approximately 12/1000 000 (Copeland 1983). However, the relative frequency of adrenal cancer varies considerably among AI series: 4.2% in the whole AI-SIE series, but 25% in another study (Terzolo et al. 1997, Mantero et al. 2000). The reasons for this apparent contradiction are unclear, given the high frequency of adrenal masses. However, in some series, the prevalence was determined by surgical findings. Some patients in such series may have been more likely to undergo surgery because of other clinical findings that are associated with adrenal cancer.
Metastasis
The adrenal glands are common sites of metastasis from extra-adrenal malignancy because of their high vascularity. Although adrenal metastases are typically bilateral and larger than 3 cm, they may be unilateral and small. In patients with a history of malignant disease, metastases are the most common cause of an incidental adrenal mass, regardless of size, accounting for 5075% of all incidentalomas in these patients (Belldegrun et al. 1986, Gillams et al. 1992, Liu et al. 2001). Carcinomas of the lung, breast, kidney and gastrointestinal tract and melanoma or lymphoma constitute the most common sources of adrenal metastases (Lau et al. 2002). In fact, adrenal metastases are found in 2575% of those who die of epithelial malignancies. The source of the primary malignancy usually is known, or widespread disease is apparent, when AI is discovered. Metastatic cancer presenting as an isolated true AI is distinctly unusual. CT-guided adrenal biopsy is most useful in the diagnosis of adrenal metastases in patients with known extra-adrenal primary malignancies. Fine-needle aspiration is much less accurate in differentiating primary adrenal adenomas from adrenal carcinomas. Importantly, the possibility of pheochromocytoma should be assessed beforehand to avoid a potentially life-threatening hypertensive crisis.
| Issues in biochemical diagnosis |
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| Future directions in biochemical diagnosis involve the use of serum molecular markers |
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Another future direction involves function-based imaging methods
The two most frequently used function-based isotope imaging studies are 131I- or 123I-labeled metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) and 131I-6-beta-iodomethylnorcholesterol (NP-59) (Kurtaran et al. 2002). MIBG is mainly used to localize and identify pheochromocytoma, while NP-59 assesses adrenal cortical function as well as differentiates between benign and malignant adrenal tumors. MIBG has the advantage over CT or MRI in that it provides a whole-body image with the administration of one tracer dose. Pheochromocytomas can occur bilaterally and may not be confined to the periadrenal region (especially in malignant pheochromocytoma with metastasis). Sensitivity and specificity of MIBG are about 87% and 95% respectively (Kievit & Haak 2000). Positive and negative MIBG results, therefore, change the prior probability of pheochromocytoma in AI from 3.5% to around 40% and 0.5% respectively. The synthetic somatostatin analog 111In-octreotide seems less sensitive but is also able to visualize tumors that are undetected by MIBG scan (Tenenbaum et al. 1995).
NP-59 is taken up in functioning adrenocortical tissue and the presence of imaging activity concordant or discordant is determined (Kurtaran et al. 2002) by morphologic findings on CT or MRI. A concordant pattern is defined as a unilateral adrenal visualization at the site of the CT-detected mass. This is most consistent with hormonally active benign adenomas. A discordant pattern is with absent, decreased or distorted uptake by the adrenal mass, indicating adrenocortical carcinoma, metastasis or other nonfunctioning space-occupying adrenal lesion. However, experience with this technique has been limited to very few centers, and definitive conclusions about its usefulness in the assessment of AI cannot be drawn. Newer techniques such as SPECT scanning are now being applied to the evaluation of AI (La Cava et al. 2003).
Assessment of strategies
AI typify the fact that incidental findings by their very nature pose a risk of overdiagnosis and overtreatment. Although most AI are of no significance beyond the anxiety they produce indirectly (not a trivial concern), some AI are clinically significant, and inadvertently leaving them alone might damage the patients health. Therefore, detection of an incidentaloma necessitates a conscious and conscientious decision regarding its management. Ideally, this decision/recommendation should be based on a careful weighing of the risks and benefits of each diagnostic and therapeutic step as well as individual patient preferences (Kievit & Haak 2000). The potential morbidity suggests a benefit of pre-symptomatic diagnosis. This benefit is conferred, however, more on an individual basis than at the population level; the health risk posed by AI, though real, is small because of the low prevalence of clinically significant tumors with hormonal activity or malignant potential, and the presence of a nonfunctional AI is relatively common.
All general approaches involve hormonal screening (Aron & Kievit 2003). However, they vary both in extent and in the specific screening tests. These differences appear to result from three issues: 1. differences in the use of empirical data to assess the probability of different disorders being present; 2. differences in assumptions about diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness, again, traceable to available empirical evidence; and 3. differences in the weights that are, either implicitly or explicitly, being attributed to various outcomes. The first two issues relate to the quality and validity of the information used. Therefore, differences may be reduced if not eliminated by using standardized guidelines (such as the one advocated by the NIH panel), which are most evidence-based. The third issue is more difficult to address, because it relates to personal preferences, not evidence adduced from studies of others. Preferences may vary in the weight that is assigned to missing a relevant disorder, to short-or long-term morbidity and mortality, and to life expectancy, quality of life, etc. Even the term relevant may be defined in different ways. For example, relevance may pertain to either posing a severe risk to the patient or to where outcome can be affected by diagnosis and treatment. An adrenal metastasis is relevant in the first sense, but may be considered less relevant or even irrelevant in the second sense because of the impossibility to influence the bad prognosis. For such differences, there cannot be universal answers. Cost-effectiveness analysis may help to determine the best approach by explicitly outlining the alternatives.
Kievit and Haak performed a cost-effective analysis of 70 different strategies for the diagnosis and treatment of AI (Kievit & Haak 2000). In addition to the strategy used for comparison, ignoring the incidentaloma, they also analyzed strategies using one of eight single tests, various two-test sequences and sequences suggested by others. With respect to final outcomes, strategies differed strongly in costs (up to 10-fold) but only marginally in their health effects (up to 1.5%). The health risk of AI (in terms of potential loss of quality adjusted life years (QALYs)) mainly depended on characteristics of the patient and the incidentaloma. The choice of diagnostic-therapeutic strategy had far less impact, because two of the three significant disorders (adrenocortical cancer and metastasis) have a poor prognosis that is not drastically changed by treatment. There was no strategy that was clearly ideal. Strategies with low false-positive rates have higher false-negative rates. Studies with low false-negative rates cause more patients to receive unnecessary surgery. Moreover, later analysis showed that the factor to which the analysis was most sensitive was the degree of anxiety about having a mass without knowing what it is (personal communication). The evidence-based medicine movement has promoted transparency and accountability about the information. It is equally valuable to reveal how choices are guided by value judgments concerning process and outcome (Kievit & Haak 2000). The combination of best evidence and careful patient-centered value judgment is the key to good clinical practice for AI.
| Surgery for AI |
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| Prognosis |
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Little is known about whether early treatment is beneficial for these conditions before they cause significant symptoms, although the unpredictable nature of the pheochromocytoma specifically, its ability to cause sudden death, and the insidious nature of the impact of the high cardiovascular risk associated with SAGH strongly suggest that early treatment would be beneficial. Moreover, the long-term prognosis of surgically treated benign adenomas causing catecholamine, cortisol or aldosterone excess appears to be reasonably good. Of note is the improvement in the cardiovascular risk factors, such as hypertension, hyperglycemia and hypercholesterolemia, after removal of an AI associated with subclinical autonomous cortisol hypersecretion. For patients found to have adrenal gland metastasis, prognosis is defined by the primary tumors histology, grade, stage and site. Approximately 25% of masses greater than 6 cm in diameter are adrenal cortical carcinomas, and these patients have very poor clinical outcomes. Among a large series of studies of adrenal cancer (usually not presenting as incidentalomas), 5-year survival was 1962% with a median of 34% (Lau et al. 2002). There is some evidence suggesting that surgical extirpation of adrenal cancer at early stages may improve the survival rate. At more advanced stages, surgical debulking may increase the efficacy of adjuvant therapy (Kopf et al. 2001, Wajchenberg et al. 2000).
| Summary and conclusions |
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