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    Presentation and management of patients with adrenal masses: a large tertiary centre experience.

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    Author
    Suntornlohanakul, Onnicha
    Mandal, Sumedha
    Saha, Pratyusha
    Saygili, Emre S
    Asia, Miriam
    Arlt, Wiebke
    Elhassan, Yasir S
    Prete, Alessandro
    Ronchi, Cristina L
    Publication date
    2024-10-29
    Subject
    Endocrinology
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Background: Adrenal masses are found in up to 5%-7% of adults. The 2016 European guidelines on the management of adrenal incidentalomas have standardised the workup of these patients, but evidence of their impact on clinical practice is lacking. Methods: Retrospective review of clinical presentation, radiological characteristics, and final diagnosis of a large cohort of patients with adrenal masses referred to a tertiary care centre 1998-2022. Sub-analysis compares outcomes before and after implementing the 2016 guidelines. Results: A total of 1397 patients (55.7% women; median age 60 years [interquartile range {IQR}, 49-70]) were included. Incidental discovery was the most frequent mode of presentation (63.7%) and 30.6% of patients had masses ≥ 4 cm (median 2.9 cm [IQR, 1.9-4.7]). Unenhanced computed tomography Hounsfield units (HU) were available for 763 patients; of these, 32.9% had heterogeneous masses or >20 HU. The most common diagnoses were adrenocortical adenoma (56.0%), phaeochromocytoma (12.7%), adrenocortical carcinoma (10.6%), and metastases (5.7%). At multivariable analysis, significant predictors of malignancy included >20 HU or heterogeneous density (odds ratio [OR] 28.40), androgen excess (OR 27.67), detection during cancer surveillance (OR 11.34), size ≥ 4 cm (OR 6.11), and male sex (OR 3.06). After implementing the 2016 guidelines, the number of adrenalectomies decreased (6.1% pre-2016 vs 4.5% post-2016) and the number of patients discharged increased (4.4% pre-2016 vs 25.3% post-2016) for benign non-functioning adrenal masses. Conclusion: Implementing the 2016 guidelines positively impacted clinical practice, reducing unnecessary surgeries and increasing the discharge rate for benign adrenal masses, thereby preserving healthcare resources and patient burden.
    Citation
    Suntornlohanakul O, Mandal S, Saha P, Saygili ES, Asia M, Arlt W, Elhassan YS, Prete A, Ronchi CL. Presentation and management of patients with adrenal masses: a large tertiary centre experience. Eur J Endocrinol. 2024 Oct 29;191(5):481-490. doi: 10.1093/ejendo/lvae131. PMID: 39425921.
    Type
    Article
    Handle
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14200/6628
    Additional Links
    https://academic.oup.com/ejendo/
    DOI
    10.1093/ejendo/lvae131
    PMID
    39425921
    Journal
    European Journal of Endocrinology
    Publisher
    Oxford University Press
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1093/ejendo/lvae131
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Diabetes and Endocrinology

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