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Adrenocortical carcinoma

From Surgopaedia

Epidemiology

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  • Rare - one per million annual incidence
  • Almost always 40-50yo, but can occur in <5yo children

Risk factors

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  • Li-Fraumeni, MEN 1, Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

Pathophysiology

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  • Metastasises to liver and lungs commonly

Clinically

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  • Most cause signs and symptoms
  • Most patients present with stage III or IV disease - symptoms are often caused by the mets
  • May be associated with increased steroid hormone secretion with biochemical features of Cushing's syndrome

Diagnosis

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  • CT: irregular borders, higher attenuation values, heterogenous, central necrosis, invasion, possibly local lymphatic mets or distant disease
  • Tend to be very large at presentation (9-13cm mean size), and have usually spread beyond adrenal gland
  • Histopathological criteria: Weiss (reticulin alterations in the presence of at least one of necrosis, high mitotic rate, venous invasion)

Workup:

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  • FDG PET
  • CT CAP
  • Consider MRI to check for local invasion
  • Consider brain imaging (brain mets are rare, but do happen)
  • Exclude functional tumours especially phaeo (>50% of adrenocortical carcinoma are functional - most commonly Cushing, followed by virilisation)
  • Do not biopsy percutaneously if being considered for surgery

Treatment

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  • Resect stage I-III - radical
    • Role for locoregional lymphadenectomy is unclear at this point, but resect all visible disease, including en bloc resection of adjacent organs
    • Can be especially hard for large right-sided lesions due to direct extension into IVC or heart. Intravascular extension may require resection on ECMO to prevent embolisation.
    • Open adrenalectomy is generally better for malignancy
  • Stage IV
    • Chemotherapy - mitotane, a derivative of DDT that is a direct adrenocortical toxin
    • Can be given as adjuvant therapy, which probably improves survival
    • Radiotherapy can be considered, especially for R1 resections, palliative, or when there is a biopsy tract to be dealt with

Prognosis

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  • 40% 5-year survival among patients who undergo R0 resection
    • Extremely limited survival for those who have incomplete resection (<1 year)
    • Even if R0, local recurrence tends to occur within two years
  • Overall 5-year survival of 15-20%