Endocrine: Adrenocortical Carcinoma
Adrenocortical Carcinoma
Basics
- More Common in Women (1.5-2.5:1)
- Bimodal Age Distribution: Age < 5 Years or 40-50’s
- Genetic Associations:
- *Most are Sporadic
- Li-Fraumeni Syndrome
- Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome
- MEN1
- 60% Are Functional
Presentation
- Mass/Malignant Effects
- Abdominal/Flank Pain
- Weight Loss
- Anorexia
- Glucocorticoid Excess (Cushing Syndrome) – Most Common Functional Presentation
- Weight Gain
- Skin Changes
- Weakness
- Androgen Excess – Often Seen Along with Cushing Syndrome Mixed
- Virilization (Development of Male Physical Characteristics)
- Mineralocorticoid Excess – Rare
- Hypertension
- Hypokalemia
Prognosis
- Generally Poor Prognosis
- 5-Year Survival:
- Stage I: 66-82%
- Stage II: 58-64%
- Stage III: 24-50%
- Stage IV: 0-17%
- Most Common Sites of Metastases:
- Liver (48-85%)
- Lungs (30-60%)
- Lymph Nodes (7-20%)
- Bone (7-13%)
Diagnosis
- Same as Adrenal Incidentaloma
Adrenocortical Carcinoma (Arrow); 7.8×4.8 cm, Heterogenous 1
TNM Staging
- TNM Staging
T | N | M | |
1 | ≤ 5.0 cm & No Invasion | Regional LN | Mets |
2 | > 5.0 cm & No Invasion | ||
3 | Invades Surrounding Fat | ||
4 | Invades Surrounding Organs |
- Staging
T | N | M | |
I | T1 | N0 | M0 |
II | T2 | N0 | M0 |
III | T3-4 | N0 | M0 |
Any T | N1 | M0 | |
IV | Any T | Any N | M1 |
Treatment
- Primary Treatment: Open Adrenalectomy
- *See Endocrine: Adrenalectomy
- Open Approach is Preferred
- Laparoscopic Adrenalectomy is Evolving but Not Yet Widely Accepted
- Minimally Invasive Approaches Generally Have Higher Risk of Recurrence, Seeding & Peritoneal Dissemination
- No Benefit to Routine Lymphadenectomy Yet Established
- Adjuvant Therapy:
- Adjuvant Mitotane (Adrenal Lytic)
- General Indications:
- Unresectable Tumors
- High Proliferation Rate (Mitotic Rate or Ki67 Expression)
- Intraoperative Tumor Spillage
- Residual or Recurrent Tumors
- Metastatic
- May Be Considered for All Patients with Localized Disease Regardless of Stage or Size
- General Indications:
- Adjuvant Chemotherapy & Radiation Therapy is Evolving
- Adjuvant Mitotane (Adrenal Lytic)
- Postop Surveillance:
- Initially: CT Every 3 Months for 2 Years
- After 2 Years: CT Every 6 Months for 5 Years
- After 5 Years: CT Every 1-2 Years
References
- Huang CJ, Wang TH, Lo YH, Hou KT, Won JG, Jap TS, Kuo CS. Adrenocortical carcinoma initially presenting with hypokalemia and hypertension mimicking hyperaldosteronism: a case report. BMC Res Notes. 2013 Oct 8;6:405. (License: CC BY-2.0)