Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

P1: SBT


0521779407-02 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 7, 2007 19:18


Adrenal Tumors 73

management
General Measures
■Search for indication of primary malignancy
■Assess size of adrenal tumor
■Assessment of radiological features; irregular contour, inhomogen-
ity or necrosis, calcification, unenhanced CT with high attenuation
value (>10 HU), local invasion raise suspicion for adrenocortical car-
cinoma
■Biochemical evaluation of incidentally discovered adrenal tumors:
many functioning tumors clinically silent

What to Do First
■Exclude pheochromocytoma
■Cushingoid features: assess for cortisol excess
■Hypertension, hypokalemia, alkalosis: assess for mineralocorti-
coid/cortisol excess
■Hirsutism, menstrual irregularities: assess for androgen excess
■CT/MRI of abdomen: if <4 cm and 24-h urine 17-KS normal, not
primary adrenocortical carcinoma
■Diagnostic biopsy of the adrenal can distinguish primary vs. metas-
tastic lesion, but not benign from malignant adrenocortical neoplasm

specific therapy
■Cortisol excess: cortisol synthesis inhibitors (ketoconazole, mety-
rapone, aminoglutethimide)
■Mineralocorticoid excess: mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist
(eg, spironolactone) or potassium-sparing diuretic (eg, amiloride,
triamterene)
■Androgen excess: enzymatic inhibitors (eg, ketoconazole) or recep-
tor antagonists (eg, spironolactone)
■Pheochromocytoma: alpha-, then beta-adrenergic receptor block-
ade, catecholamine synthesis inhibitors (eg, alpha-methyl tyrosine)
■Adrenocortical carcinoma: medical management of cortisol excess,
surgical resection, radiation, adrenolytic therapy with mitotane
■Surgery indicated:
➣Pheochromocytoma
➣Unilateral functional adrenocortical adenoma
➣Tu m o r > 4 c m
➣Enlarging tumor, suspicious radiological features
➣Elevated urinary 17-KS
➣Not indicated for hyperaldosteronism from bilateral hyperplasia
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