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SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study

Myelolipoma is the second most common adrenal tumor. Yet, systematic approach to these tumors remains poorly defined. Thus, we aimed to describe natural history of myelolipoma and to identify predictors of tumor growth and need for surgery. We conducted a retrospective longitudinal follow-up study o...

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Autores principales: Hamidi, Oksana, Raman, Ram Narayan, Lazik, Natalia, Ariza-Iniguez, Nicole, McKenzie, Travis J, Bancos, Irina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207879/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1257
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author Hamidi, Oksana
Raman, Ram Narayan
Lazik, Natalia
Ariza-Iniguez, Nicole
McKenzie, Travis J
Bancos, Irina
author_facet Hamidi, Oksana
Raman, Ram Narayan
Lazik, Natalia
Ariza-Iniguez, Nicole
McKenzie, Travis J
Bancos, Irina
author_sort Hamidi, Oksana
collection PubMed
description Myelolipoma is the second most common adrenal tumor. Yet, systematic approach to these tumors remains poorly defined. Thus, we aimed to describe natural history of myelolipoma and to identify predictors of tumor growth and need for surgery. We conducted a retrospective longitudinal follow-up study of consecutive patients with myelolipoma. A total of 321 myelolipomas (median size, 2.3 cm [range, 0.5-18.0]) were diagnosed in 305 patients at median age of 63 years (25-87). Most myelolipomas were discovered incidentally (86.6%), whereas others were discovered on imaging done for cancer staging (8.8%) or during workup of mass effect symptoms (4.6%). Median duration of follow-up was 54 months (range, 0.03-267). Compared with myelolipomas <6 cm, tumors ≥6 cm were more likely to be right-sided (59% vs 41%, P=0.02), bilateral (21% vs 3%, P <.0001), cause mass effects symptoms (32% vs 0%, P<.0001), have radiographic hemorrhagic changes (14% vs 1%, P<.0001), and undergo adrenalectomy (52% vs 5%, P<.0001). There was no difference in sex or age at diagnosis between the groups. Hemorrhagic changes were noted in 9 (3.0%) patients with median tumor size of 7.0 cm (range, 1.8-18.0). Concomitant adrenal hormone excess was diagnosed in 12/126 (9.5%) patients. Primary aldosteronism was noted in 9 patients: due to concomitant ipsilateral (n=3) or contralateral adrenocortical adenoma (n=3), or bilateral idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia (n=3). Autonomous cortisol excess was noted in 3 patients: due to concomitant contralateral (n=2) or ipsilateral adrenocortical adenoma (n=1). Of 162 patients with ≥6 months of imaging follow-up, tumor size change ranged from -10 to 115 mm (median, 0 mm) and tumor growth rate ranged from -5.6 to 140 mm/year (median, 0 mm/year). Tumor growth ≥1.0 cm (n=26, 16.0%) was associated with larger initial tumor size (3.6 vs 2.3 cm, P=0.02) and hemorrhagic changes on imaging (12% vs 2%, P=0.007), compared with <1 cm size change. Myelolipomas with ≥1.0 cm growth were more likely to undergo adrenalectomy (35% vs 8%, P<.0001). Among 37 (12%) patients that underwent adrenalectomy for myelolipoma, surgical indications included: large tumor size/tumor growth (32%), diagnostic surgery (27%), mass effect symptoms (14%), concomitant ipsilateral tumor leading to hormonal excess (11%), acute hemorrhage (8%), and concomitant resection during non-adrenal surgery (8%). In conclusion, most myelolipomas are discovered incidentally, whereas myelolipomas ≥6 are more likely to cause mass effect symptoms, have radiographic hemorrhagic changes, and more commonly undergo resection. Hormonal excess is rare and is usually attributed to concomitant adrenocortical adenoma or hyperplasia. Tumor growth ≥1.0 cm is associated with larger myelolipoma and presence of hemorrhagic changes. Surgical resection should be considered in symptomatic patients with large tumors, evidence of hemorrhage, or tumor growth.
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spelling pubmed-72078792020-05-13 SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study Hamidi, Oksana Raman, Ram Narayan Lazik, Natalia Ariza-Iniguez, Nicole McKenzie, Travis J Bancos, Irina J Endocr Soc Adrenal Myelolipoma is the second most common adrenal tumor. Yet, systematic approach to these tumors remains poorly defined. Thus, we aimed to describe natural history of myelolipoma and to identify predictors of tumor growth and need for surgery. We conducted a retrospective longitudinal follow-up study of consecutive patients with myelolipoma. A total of 321 myelolipomas (median size, 2.3 cm [range, 0.5-18.0]) were diagnosed in 305 patients at median age of 63 years (25-87). Most myelolipomas were discovered incidentally (86.6%), whereas others were discovered on imaging done for cancer staging (8.8%) or during workup of mass effect symptoms (4.6%). Median duration of follow-up was 54 months (range, 0.03-267). Compared with myelolipomas <6 cm, tumors ≥6 cm were more likely to be right-sided (59% vs 41%, P=0.02), bilateral (21% vs 3%, P <.0001), cause mass effects symptoms (32% vs 0%, P<.0001), have radiographic hemorrhagic changes (14% vs 1%, P<.0001), and undergo adrenalectomy (52% vs 5%, P<.0001). There was no difference in sex or age at diagnosis between the groups. Hemorrhagic changes were noted in 9 (3.0%) patients with median tumor size of 7.0 cm (range, 1.8-18.0). Concomitant adrenal hormone excess was diagnosed in 12/126 (9.5%) patients. Primary aldosteronism was noted in 9 patients: due to concomitant ipsilateral (n=3) or contralateral adrenocortical adenoma (n=3), or bilateral idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia (n=3). Autonomous cortisol excess was noted in 3 patients: due to concomitant contralateral (n=2) or ipsilateral adrenocortical adenoma (n=1). Of 162 patients with ≥6 months of imaging follow-up, tumor size change ranged from -10 to 115 mm (median, 0 mm) and tumor growth rate ranged from -5.6 to 140 mm/year (median, 0 mm/year). Tumor growth ≥1.0 cm (n=26, 16.0%) was associated with larger initial tumor size (3.6 vs 2.3 cm, P=0.02) and hemorrhagic changes on imaging (12% vs 2%, P=0.007), compared with <1 cm size change. Myelolipomas with ≥1.0 cm growth were more likely to undergo adrenalectomy (35% vs 8%, P<.0001). Among 37 (12%) patients that underwent adrenalectomy for myelolipoma, surgical indications included: large tumor size/tumor growth (32%), diagnostic surgery (27%), mass effect symptoms (14%), concomitant ipsilateral tumor leading to hormonal excess (11%), acute hemorrhage (8%), and concomitant resection during non-adrenal surgery (8%). In conclusion, most myelolipomas are discovered incidentally, whereas myelolipomas ≥6 are more likely to cause mass effect symptoms, have radiographic hemorrhagic changes, and more commonly undergo resection. Hormonal excess is rare and is usually attributed to concomitant adrenocortical adenoma or hyperplasia. Tumor growth ≥1.0 cm is associated with larger myelolipoma and presence of hemorrhagic changes. Surgical resection should be considered in symptomatic patients with large tumors, evidence of hemorrhage, or tumor growth. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207879/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1257 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 Adrenal
Hamidi, Oksana
Raman, Ram Narayan
Lazik, Natalia
Ariza-Iniguez, Nicole
McKenzie, Travis J
Bancos, Irina
SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
title SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
title_full SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
title_fullStr SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
title_full_unstemmed SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
title_short SAT-170 Clinical Course of Adrenal Myelolipoma: A Long-Term Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
title_sort sat-170 clinical course of adrenal myelolipoma: a long-term longitudinal follow-up study
topic Adrenal
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207879/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1257
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