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FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study

Disclosure: M. Chinthapalli: None. P. Dogra: None. R. Sandooja: None. L. Rahimi: None. N.M. Iniguez Ariza: None. T. Foster: None. I. Bancos: None. Introduction: Adrenal glands are susceptible to hemorrhage due to their unique vasculature and physiological stress response. Scarce data are available o...

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Autores principales: Chinthapalli, Mrunal Teja, Dogra, Prerna, Sandooja, Rashi, Rahimi, Leili, Iniguez Ariza, Nicole Marie, Foster, Trenton, Bancos, Irina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10554938/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.170
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author Chinthapalli, Mrunal Teja
Dogra, Prerna
Sandooja, Rashi
Rahimi, Leili
Iniguez Ariza, Nicole Marie
Foster, Trenton
Bancos, Irina
author_facet Chinthapalli, Mrunal Teja
Dogra, Prerna
Sandooja, Rashi
Rahimi, Leili
Iniguez Ariza, Nicole Marie
Foster, Trenton
Bancos, Irina
author_sort Chinthapalli, Mrunal Teja
collection PubMed
description Disclosure: M. Chinthapalli: None. P. Dogra: None. R. Sandooja: None. L. Rahimi: None. N.M. Iniguez Ariza: None. T. Foster: None. I. Bancos: None. Introduction: Adrenal glands are susceptible to hemorrhage due to their unique vasculature and physiological stress response. Scarce data are available on the presentation, etiology, and outcomes of adrenal hemorrhage (AH). Objective: To describe the presentation, etiological associations, and outcomes of patients with unilateral and bilateral AH. Methods: Single-center retrospective longitudinal study of consecutive patients reported to have AH on imaging performed between January 1(st) 2017-December 31(st) 2021. Clinical, baseline and follow up imaging, and laboratory data were reviewed. Subgroup analysis was performed based on the laterality (unilateral vs. bilateral) of AH. Results: Of 454 patients with AH (median age 62 years (IQR 50-70), 160 (35%) women), 383 (85%) had unilateral AH, 60 (13%) presented with synchronous bilateral AH, and 9 (2%) had unilateral AH followed by contralateral AH at a later time (metachronous bilateral AH). Only 93 (20%) patients had an evaluation by an endocrinologist. AH was discovered incidentally in 190 (42%) patients, and during evaluation for abdominal or back pain in 133 (29%), trauma in 104 (23%), sepsis in 19 (4%), and adrenal insufficiency in 8 (2%). Primary etiology of AH was a post-procedural complication in 154 (34%), trauma in 126 (28%), coagulopathy in 54 (12%), anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy in 52 (12%), adrenal neoplasm in 29 (6%) and sepsis in 20 (4%). Metastasis (15, 50%) represented the most common adrenal neoplasm associated with AH. In 208 (46%) patients, diagnosis of AH occurred in the hospital setting, and in 246 (54%) during an outpatient evaluation. In the 393 patients with available baseline imaging, the median size of AH was 3.1 cm (IQR 2.2-4.0). During a median imaging follow-up of 6 months (IQR 3-12), AH reduced in size with a median decrease of -2.6 cm (IQR -1.8 to -3.7) on the right and -2.0 cm (IQR -1.0 to -4.8) on the left. Compared to patients with unilateral AH, those with bilateral AH were more likely to be diagnosed in the hospital setting (61 vs. 43%, P=0.006), have an underlying coagulopathy (50 vs. 4%, P<0.0001), or sepsis (13 vs. 3%, P<0.0001), be on anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy (48 vs. 21%, P<0.0001), develop primary adrenal insufficiency (61 vs. 0%, P<0.0001) and have larger baseline AH size (4 cm vs. left 2.7 and right 3.1 cm, P=0.0002), but a similar rate of resolution. Conclusions: AH frequently presents as unilateral hemorrhage and can occur secondary to various etiologies, with trauma and postprocedural complication being the most common. Association with an underlying adrenal mass is uncommon, seen only in 6%. Bilateral AH carries a high risk for primary adrenal insufficiency and is more likely to occur in hospitalized patients, possibly due to an increased prevalence of underlying coagulopathy, sepsis and need for anticoagulation or antiplatelet therapy. Presentation: Friday, June 16, 2023
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spelling pubmed-105549382023-10-06 FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study Chinthapalli, Mrunal Teja Dogra, Prerna Sandooja, Rashi Rahimi, Leili Iniguez Ariza, Nicole Marie Foster, Trenton Bancos, Irina J Endocr Soc Adrenal (Excluding Mineralocorticoids) Disclosure: M. Chinthapalli: None. P. Dogra: None. R. Sandooja: None. L. Rahimi: None. N.M. Iniguez Ariza: None. T. Foster: None. I. Bancos: None. Introduction: Adrenal glands are susceptible to hemorrhage due to their unique vasculature and physiological stress response. Scarce data are available on the presentation, etiology, and outcomes of adrenal hemorrhage (AH). Objective: To describe the presentation, etiological associations, and outcomes of patients with unilateral and bilateral AH. Methods: Single-center retrospective longitudinal study of consecutive patients reported to have AH on imaging performed between January 1(st) 2017-December 31(st) 2021. Clinical, baseline and follow up imaging, and laboratory data were reviewed. Subgroup analysis was performed based on the laterality (unilateral vs. bilateral) of AH. Results: Of 454 patients with AH (median age 62 years (IQR 50-70), 160 (35%) women), 383 (85%) had unilateral AH, 60 (13%) presented with synchronous bilateral AH, and 9 (2%) had unilateral AH followed by contralateral AH at a later time (metachronous bilateral AH). Only 93 (20%) patients had an evaluation by an endocrinologist. AH was discovered incidentally in 190 (42%) patients, and during evaluation for abdominal or back pain in 133 (29%), trauma in 104 (23%), sepsis in 19 (4%), and adrenal insufficiency in 8 (2%). Primary etiology of AH was a post-procedural complication in 154 (34%), trauma in 126 (28%), coagulopathy in 54 (12%), anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy in 52 (12%), adrenal neoplasm in 29 (6%) and sepsis in 20 (4%). Metastasis (15, 50%) represented the most common adrenal neoplasm associated with AH. In 208 (46%) patients, diagnosis of AH occurred in the hospital setting, and in 246 (54%) during an outpatient evaluation. In the 393 patients with available baseline imaging, the median size of AH was 3.1 cm (IQR 2.2-4.0). During a median imaging follow-up of 6 months (IQR 3-12), AH reduced in size with a median decrease of -2.6 cm (IQR -1.8 to -3.7) on the right and -2.0 cm (IQR -1.0 to -4.8) on the left. Compared to patients with unilateral AH, those with bilateral AH were more likely to be diagnosed in the hospital setting (61 vs. 43%, P=0.006), have an underlying coagulopathy (50 vs. 4%, P<0.0001), or sepsis (13 vs. 3%, P<0.0001), be on anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy (48 vs. 21%, P<0.0001), develop primary adrenal insufficiency (61 vs. 0%, P<0.0001) and have larger baseline AH size (4 cm vs. left 2.7 and right 3.1 cm, P=0.0002), but a similar rate of resolution. Conclusions: AH frequently presents as unilateral hemorrhage and can occur secondary to various etiologies, with trauma and postprocedural complication being the most common. Association with an underlying adrenal mass is uncommon, seen only in 6%. Bilateral AH carries a high risk for primary adrenal insufficiency and is more likely to occur in hospitalized patients, possibly due to an increased prevalence of underlying coagulopathy, sepsis and need for anticoagulation or antiplatelet therapy. Presentation: Friday, June 16, 2023 Oxford University Press 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10554938/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.170 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Adrenal (Excluding Mineralocorticoids)
Chinthapalli, Mrunal Teja
Dogra, Prerna
Sandooja, Rashi
Rahimi, Leili
Iniguez Ariza, Nicole Marie
Foster, Trenton
Bancos, Irina
FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study
title FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study
title_full FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study
title_fullStr FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study
title_full_unstemmed FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study
title_short FRI175 Presentation, Etiology And Outcomes Of Adrenal Hemorrhage A Large Single-center Study
title_sort fri175 presentation, etiology and outcomes of adrenal hemorrhage a large single-center study
topic Adrenal (Excluding Mineralocorticoids)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10554938/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.170
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