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SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor

Background: Ectopic Cushing’s syndrome from an ACTH-secreting neuroendocrine tumor (NET) is a rare condition whose onset and disease progression is often more aggressive than other forms of Cushing’s syndrome due to complications from severe hypercortisolism. Clinical Case: A 75-year old woman prese...

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Autores principales: Sumal, Amit Kartar Singh, Liao, Charles, Chen, Julie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207740/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.020
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author Sumal, Amit Kartar Singh
Liao, Charles
Chen, Julie
author_facet Sumal, Amit Kartar Singh
Liao, Charles
Chen, Julie
author_sort Sumal, Amit Kartar Singh
collection PubMed
description Background: Ectopic Cushing’s syndrome from an ACTH-secreting neuroendocrine tumor (NET) is a rare condition whose onset and disease progression is often more aggressive than other forms of Cushing’s syndrome due to complications from severe hypercortisolism. Clinical Case: A 75-year old woman presented with profound proximal muscle weakness, severe hypokalemia, Cushingoid features, and biopsy-proven Candida esophagitis. Initial testing was consistent with ACTH-dependent Cushing syndrome: elevated 24 hour urinary cortisol excretion (1,310.54 mcg/24h; n <50 mcg/24h), abnormal 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test (68.3 ug/dL), and elevated ACTH level (200 pg/mL; n: 7.2–63.3 pg/mL). MRI was negative for a pituitary lesion but abdominal CT revealed an 8.8 cm liver mass with biopsy consistent with a well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor, WHO Grade 2. Subsequent (68)Ga-DOTATATE-PET/CT noted DOTATATE uptake in the liver lesion, a 0.9 cm right pulmonary nodule, and the pancreatic tail without CT correlate. Initially, the patient was prescribed mifepristone and spironolactone for hypokalemia. Given her NET of unknown primary, metastatic disease, and immunocompromised state due to hypercortisolism, the patient was not a candidate for surgical resection of her NET but was instead referred for bilateral adrenalectomy. However, she rapidly decompensated from complications of her hypercortisolism prior to surgery. Her weakness progressed to immobility, and she developed acute psychosis manifested as agitation and mutism. The patient was immediately admitted to the hospital where she developed new-onset atrial flutter and myelosuppression requiring multiple transfusions. She underwent urgent bilateral adrenalectomy, but despite surgery, her post-operative course was complicated by hypoxemic respiratory failure and shock. The patient shortly thereafter expired from pulseless electrical activity arrest. Conclusion: This atypical case of an ectopic ACTH-secreting NET highlights the life-threatening complications associated with severe hypercortisolism, including: opportunistic infection, severe metabolic abnormalities, psychosis, myopathy, and critical illness that can incite myelosuppression and unstable arrhythmias. These patients can quickly deteriorate and are at high risk for mortality. Early diagnosis and swift reversal of their hypercortisolism with bilateral adrenalectomy are oftentimes needed to prevent these potentially fatal complications.
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spelling pubmed-72077402020-05-13 SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor Sumal, Amit Kartar Singh Liao, Charles Chen, Julie J Endocr Soc Tumor Biology Background: Ectopic Cushing’s syndrome from an ACTH-secreting neuroendocrine tumor (NET) is a rare condition whose onset and disease progression is often more aggressive than other forms of Cushing’s syndrome due to complications from severe hypercortisolism. Clinical Case: A 75-year old woman presented with profound proximal muscle weakness, severe hypokalemia, Cushingoid features, and biopsy-proven Candida esophagitis. Initial testing was consistent with ACTH-dependent Cushing syndrome: elevated 24 hour urinary cortisol excretion (1,310.54 mcg/24h; n <50 mcg/24h), abnormal 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test (68.3 ug/dL), and elevated ACTH level (200 pg/mL; n: 7.2–63.3 pg/mL). MRI was negative for a pituitary lesion but abdominal CT revealed an 8.8 cm liver mass with biopsy consistent with a well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor, WHO Grade 2. Subsequent (68)Ga-DOTATATE-PET/CT noted DOTATATE uptake in the liver lesion, a 0.9 cm right pulmonary nodule, and the pancreatic tail without CT correlate. Initially, the patient was prescribed mifepristone and spironolactone for hypokalemia. Given her NET of unknown primary, metastatic disease, and immunocompromised state due to hypercortisolism, the patient was not a candidate for surgical resection of her NET but was instead referred for bilateral adrenalectomy. However, she rapidly decompensated from complications of her hypercortisolism prior to surgery. Her weakness progressed to immobility, and she developed acute psychosis manifested as agitation and mutism. The patient was immediately admitted to the hospital where she developed new-onset atrial flutter and myelosuppression requiring multiple transfusions. She underwent urgent bilateral adrenalectomy, but despite surgery, her post-operative course was complicated by hypoxemic respiratory failure and shock. The patient shortly thereafter expired from pulseless electrical activity arrest. Conclusion: This atypical case of an ectopic ACTH-secreting NET highlights the life-threatening complications associated with severe hypercortisolism, including: opportunistic infection, severe metabolic abnormalities, psychosis, myopathy, and critical illness that can incite myelosuppression and unstable arrhythmias. These patients can quickly deteriorate and are at high risk for mortality. Early diagnosis and swift reversal of their hypercortisolism with bilateral adrenalectomy are oftentimes needed to prevent these potentially fatal complications. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207740/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.020 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://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 (http://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 Tumor Biology
Sumal, Amit Kartar Singh
Liao, Charles
Chen, Julie
SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor
title SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor
title_full SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor
title_fullStr SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor
title_full_unstemmed SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor
title_short SAT-118 Rapid Decompensation from Complications of Severe Hypercortisolism in an Unusual Presentation of an Ectopic ACTH-Secreting Neuroendocrine Tumor
title_sort sat-118 rapid decompensation from complications of severe hypercortisolism in an unusual presentation of an ectopic acth-secreting neuroendocrine tumor
topic Tumor Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207740/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.020
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