New Findings on Presentation and Outcome of Patients With Adrenocortical Cancer: Results From a National Cohort Study
- PMID: 37022947
- DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgad199
New Findings on Presentation and Outcome of Patients With Adrenocortical Cancer: Results From a National Cohort Study
Erratum in
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Correction to: "New Findings on Presentation and Outcome of Patients With Adrenocortical Cancer: Results From a National Cohort Study".J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2024 Apr 19;109(5):e1420. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgae063. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2024. PMID: 38324779 No abstract available.
Abstract
Context: Because of the rarity of adrenocortical cancer (ACC), only a few population-based studies are available, and they reported limited details in the characterization of patients and their treatment.
Objective: To describe in a nationwide cohort the presentation of patients with ACC, treatment strategies, and potential prognostic factors.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of 512 patients with ACC, diagnosed in 12 referral centers in Italy from January 1990 to June 2018.
Results: ACC diagnosed as incidentalomas accounted for overall 38.1% of cases, with a frequency that increases with age and with less aggressive pathological features than symptomatic tumors. Women (60.2%) were younger than men and had smaller tumors, which more frequently secreted hormones. Surgery was mainly done with an open approach (72%), and after surgical resection, 62.7% of patients started adjuvant mitotane therapy. Recurrence after tumor resection occurred in 56.2% of patients. In patients with localized disease, cortisol secretion, ENSAT stage III, Ki67%, and Weiss score were associated with an increased risk of recurrence, whereas margin-free resection, open surgery, and adjuvant mitotane treatment were associated with reduced risk. Death occurred in 38.1% of patients and recurrence-free survival (RFS) predicted overall survival (OS). In localized disease, age, cortisol secretion, Ki67%, ENSAT stage III, and recurrence were associated with increased risk of mortality. ACCs presenting as adrenal incidentalomas showed prolonged RFS and OS.
Conclusion: Our study shows that ACC is a sex-related disease and demonstrates that an incidental presentation is associated with a better outcome. Given the correlation between RFS and OS, RFS may be used as a surrogate endpoint in clinical studies.
Keywords: adrenal incidentaloma; gender disease; mitotane; recurrence; surgery; survival.
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