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. 2022 Oct 1;157(10):870-877.
doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2022.3544.

American Association of Endocrine Surgeons Guidelines for Adrenalectomy: Executive Summary

Affiliations

American Association of Endocrine Surgeons Guidelines for Adrenalectomy: Executive Summary

Linwah Yip et al. JAMA Surg. .

Abstract

Importance: Adrenalectomy is the definitive treatment for multiple adrenal abnormalities. Advances in technology and genomics and an improved understanding of adrenal pathophysiology have altered operative techniques and indications.

Objective: To develop evidence-based recommendations to enhance the appropriate, safe, and effective approaches to adrenalectomy.

Evidence review: A multidisciplinary panel identified and investigated 7 categories of relevant clinical concern to practicing surgeons. Questions were structured in the framework Population, Intervention/Exposure, Comparison, and Outcome, and a guided review of medical literature from PubMed and/or Embase from 1980 to 2021 was performed. Recommendations were developed using Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation methodology and were discussed until consensus, and patient advocacy representation was included.

Findings: Patients with an adrenal incidentaloma 1 cm or larger should undergo biochemical testing and further imaging characterization. Adrenal protocol computed tomography (CT) should be used to stratify malignancy risk and concern for pheochromocytoma. Routine scheduled follow-up of a nonfunctional adrenal nodule with benign imaging characteristics and unenhanced CT with Hounsfield units less than 10 is not suggested. When unilateral disease is present, laparoscopic adrenalectomy is recommended for patients with primary aldosteronism or autonomous cortisol secretion. Patients with clinical and radiographic findings consistent with adrenocortical carcinoma should be treated at high-volume multidisciplinary centers to optimize outcomes, including, when possible, a complete R0 resection without tumor disruption, which may require en bloc radical resection. Selective or nonselective α blockade can be used to safely prepare patients for surgical resection of paraganglioma/pheochromocytoma. Empirical perioperative glucocorticoid replacement therapy is indicated for patients with overt Cushing syndrome, but for patients with mild autonomous cortisol secretion, postoperative day 1 morning cortisol or cosyntropin stimulation testing can be used to determine the need for glucocorticoid replacement therapy. When patient and tumor variables are appropriate, we recommend minimally invasive adrenalectomy over open adrenalectomy because of improved perioperative morbidity. Minimally invasive adrenalectomy can be achieved either via a retroperitoneal or transperitoneal approach depending on surgeon expertise, as well as tumor and patient characteristics.

Conclusions and relevance: Twenty-six clinically relevant and evidence-based recommendations are provided to assist surgeons with perioperative adrenal care.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Wachtel reported grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (KL2 TR001879), during the conduct of the study. Dr Jimenez reported research support from Lantheus Pharmaceuticals, Progenics, Exelixis, MSD, and Pfizer and serving on an advisory board for HRA Pharma and Pfizer during the conduct of the study. Dr Berber reported consulting for Medtronic, Aesculap, and Ethicon outside the submitted work. Dr Hammer reported being a founder of and consultant for Vasaragen, having patents for diagnostics via Vasaragen and the University of Michigan, and being the editor or associate editor of two textbooks outside the submitted work. Dr Bancos reported grants from the NIH and fees to her institution from HRA Pharma, Corcept, Lantheus, Recordati, Spruce, Sparrow, and Adrenas outside the submitted work. Dr Asa reported serving as an advisor for Leica Biosystems, Ibex Medical Analytics, and Iron Mountain outside the submitted work. Dr Fahey reported being a consultant and investor in Mediflix Inc. No other disclosures were reported.

Comment in

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