58 research outputs found

    Long-term outcome of primary bilateral macronodular adrenocortical hyperplasia after unilateral adrenalectomy

    Full text link
    CONTEXT Unilateral adrenalectomy has been proposed in selected patients with primary bilateral macronodular adrenocortical hyperplasia (PBMAH), but its long-term outcome is unclear. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to analyze long-term clinical and biochemical outcome of unilateral adrenalectomy versus bilateral adrenalectomy in patients with PBMAH in comparison to outcome of cortisol-producing adenoma (CPA) treated by unilateral adrenalectomy. DESIGN Retrospective observational study in three German and one Italian academic tertiary care center. PATIENTS AND METHODS 25 PBMAH patients after unilateral adrenalectomy (unilat-ADX-PBMAH), 9 patients with PBMAH and bilateral adrenalectomy (bilat-ADX-PBMAH) and 39 patients with CPA and unilateral adrenalectomy (unilat-ADX-CPA) were included. RESULTS Baseline clinical and biochemical parameters were comparable in unilat-ADX-PBMAH, bilat-ADX-PBMAH and unilat-ADX-CPA. Directly after surgery, 84% of the unilat-ADX-PBMAH patients experienced initial remission of Cushing's syndrome. In contrast, at last follow-up (median 50 months) 32% of the unilat-ADX-PBMAH patients were biochemically controlled compared to nearly all patients in the other two groups (p=0.000). Adrenalectomy of the contralateral side had to be performed in 12% of the initially unilat-ADX-PBMAH patients. 3 of 20 unilat-ADX-PBMAH patients (15%) died during follow-up presumably of Cushing's syndrome related causes whereas no deaths occurred in the other two groups (p=0.008). Deaths occurred exclusively in patients who were not biochemically controlled after unilateral ADX. CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest that unilateral adrenalectomy of PBMAH patients leads to clinical remission and a lower incidence of adrenal crisis, but less sufficient biochemical control of hypercortisolism potentially provoking a higher mortality

    Pasireotide can induce sustained decreases in urinary cortisol and provide clinical benefit in patients with Cushing’s disease: results from an open-ended, open-label extension trial

    Get PDF
    International audiencePurpose Report the efficacy and safety of pasireotide sc in patients with Cushing's disease during an open-ended, open-label extension to a randomized, double-blind, 12-month, Phase III study. Methods 162 patients entered the core study. 58 patients who had mean UFC B ULN at month 12 or were bene-fiting clinically from pasireotide entered the extension. Patients received the same dose of pasireotide as at the end of the core study (300–1,200 lg bid). Dose titration was permitted according to efficacy or drug-related adverse events. Results 40 patients completed 24 months' treatment. Of the patients who entered the extension, 50.0 % (29/58) and 34.5 % (20/58) had controlled UFC (UFC B ULN) at months 12 and 24, respectively. The mean percentage decrease in UFC was 57.3 % (95 % CI 40.7–73.9; n = 52) and 62.1 % (50.8–73.5; n = 33) after 12 and 24 months' treatment, respectively. Improvements in clinical signs of Cushing's disease were sustained up to month 24. The most frequent drug-related adverse events in patients who received C1 dose of pasireotide (n = 162) from core baseline until the 24-month cut-off were diarrhea (55.6 %), nausea (48.1 %), hyperglycemia (38.9 %), and cholelithi-asis (31.5 %). No new safety issues were identified during the extension. Conclusions Reductions in mean UFC and improvements in clinical signs of Cushing's disease were maintained over 24 months of pasireotide treatment. The safety profile of pasireotide is typical for a somatostatin analogue, except for the frequency and degree of hyperglycemia; patients should be monitored for changes in glucose homeostasis. Pasireotide represents the first approved pituitary-targeted treatment for patients with Cushing's disease.-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users

    Differential expression of the protein kinase A subunits in normal adrenal glands and adrenocortical adenomas

    Get PDF
    Somatic mutations in protein kinase A catalytic a subunit (PRKACA) were found to be causative for 30-40% of cortisol-producing adenomas (CPA) of the adrenal gland, rendering PKA signalling constitutively active. In its resting state, PKA is a stable and inactive heterotetramer, consisting of two catalytic and two regulatory subunits with the latter inhibiting PKA activity. The human genome encodes three different PKA catalytic subunits and four different regulatory subunits that are preferentially expressed in different organs. In normal adrenal glands all regulatory subunits are expressed, while CPA exhibit reduced protein levels of the regulatory subunit II beta. In this study, we linked for the first time the loss of RII beta protein levels to the PRKACA mutation status and found the down-regulation of RII beta to arise post-transcriptionally. We further found the PKA subunit expression pattern of different tumours is also present in the zones of the normal adrenal cortex and demonstrate that the different PKA subunits have a differential expression pattern in each zone of the normal adrenal gland, indicating potential specific roles of these subunits in the regulation of different hormones secretion

    Functional Implications of LH/hCG Receptors in Pregnancy-Induced Cushing Syndrome

    Get PDF
    Context: Elevated human choriogonadotropin (hCG) may stimulate aberrantly expressed luteinizing hormone (LH)/hCG receptor (LHCGR) in adrenal glands, resulting in pregnancy-induced bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia and transient Cushing syndrome (CS). Objective: To determine the role of LHCGR in transient, pregnancy-induced CS. Design, Setting, Patient, and Intervention: We investigated the functional implications of LHCGRs in a patient presenting, at a tertiary referral center, with repeated pregnancy-induced CS with bilateral adrenal hyperplasia, resolving after parturition. Main Outcome Measures and Results: Acute testing for aberrant hormone receptors was negative except for arginine vasopressin (AVP)–increased cortisol secretion. Long-term hCG stimulation induced hypercortisolism, which was unsuppressed by dexamethasone. Postadrenalectomy histopathology demonstrated steroidogenically active adrenocortical hyperplasia and ectopic cortical cell clusters in the medulla. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction showed upregulated expression of LHCGR, transcription factors GATA4, ZFPM2, and proopiomelanocortin (POMC), AVP receptors (AVPRs) AVPR1A and AVPR2, and downregulated melanocortin 2 receptor (MC2R) vs control adrenals. LHCGR was localized in subcapsular, zona glomerulosa, and hyperplastic cells. Single adrenocorticotropic hormone–positive medullary cells were demonstrated in the zona reticularis. The role of adrenal adrenocorticotropic hormone was considered negligible due to downregulated MC2R. Coexpression of CYP11B1/CYP11B2 and AVPR1A/AVPR2 was observed in ectopic cortical cells in the medulla. hCG stimulation of the patient’s adrenal cell cultures significantly increased cyclic adenosine monophosphate, corticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol, cortisol, and androstenedione production. CTNNB1, PRKAR1A, ARMC5, and PRKACA gene mutational analyses were negative. Conclusion: Nongenetic, transient, somatic mutation-independent, pregnancy-induced CS was due to hCG-stimulated transformation of LHCGR- positive undifferentiated subcapsular cells (presumably adrenocortical progenitors) into LHCGR-positive hyperplastic cortical cells. These cells respond to hCG stimulation with cortisol secretion. Without the ligand, they persist with aberrant LHCGR expression and the ability to respond to the same stimulus

    Adjuvant mitotane versus surveillance in low-grade, localised adrenocortical carcinoma (ADIUVO): an international, multicentre, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial and observational study

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND Adjuvant treatment with mitotane is commonly used after resection of adrenocortical carcinoma; however, treatment remains controversial, particularly if risk of recurrence is not high. We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of adjuvant mitotane compared with surveillance alone following complete tumour resection in patients with adrenocortical carcinoma considered to be at low to intermediate risk of recurrence. METHODS ADIUVO was a multicentre, open-label, parallel, randomised, phase 3 trial done in 23 centres across seven countries. Patients aged 18 years or older with adrenocortical carcinoma and low to intermediate risk of recurrence (R0, stage I-III, and Ki67 ≤10%) were randomly assigned to adjuvant oral mitotane two or three times daily (the dose was adjusted by the local investigator with the target of reaching and maintaining plasma mitotane concentrations of 14-20 mg/L) for 2 years or surveillance alone. All consecutive patients at 14 study centres fulfilling the eligibility criteria of the ADIUVO trial who refused randomisation and agreed on data collection via the European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors adrenocortical carcinoma registry were included prospectively in the ADIUVO Observational study. The primary endpoint was recurrence-free survival, defined as the time from randomisation to the first radiological evidence of recurrence or death from any cause (whichever occurred first), assessed in all randomly assigned patients by intention to treat. Overall survival, defined as time from the date of randomisation to the date of death from any cause, was a secondary endpoint analysed by intention to treat in all randomly assigned patients. Safety was assessed in all patients who adhered to the assigned regimen, which was defined by taking at least one tablet of mitotane in the mitotane group and no mitotane at all in the surveillance group. The ADIUVO trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00777244, and is now complete. FINDINGS Between Oct 23, 2008, and Dec 27, 2018, 45 patients were randomly assigned to mitotane and 46 to surveillance alone. Because the study was discontinued prematurely, 5-year recurrence-free and overall survival are reported instead of recurrence-free and overall survival as defined in the protocol. 5-year recurrence-free survival was 79% (95% CI 67-94) in the mitotane group and 75% (63-90) in the surveillance group (hazard ratio 0·74 [95% CI 0·30-1·85]). Two people in the mitotane group and five people in the surveillance group died, and 5-year overall survival was not significantly different (95% [95% CI 89-100] in the mitotane group and 86% [74-100] in the surveillance group). All 42 patients who received mitotane had adverse events, and eight (19%) discontinued treatment. There were no grade 4 adverse events or treatment-related deaths. INTERPRETATION Adjuvant mitotane might not be indicated in patients with low-grade, localised adrenocortical carcinoma considering the relatively good prognosis of these patients, and no significant improvement in recurrence-free survival and treatment-associated toxicity in the mitotane group. However, the study was discontinued prematurely due to slow recruitment and cannot rule out an efficacy of treatment. FUNDING AIFA, ENSAT Cancer Health F2-2010-259735 programme, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Cancer Research UK, and the French Ministry of Health

    Heat Shock Protein 90 as a Prognostic Marker and Therapeutic Target for Adrenocortical Carcinoma

    Get PDF
    Background: Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare tumor entity with restricted therapeutic opportunities. HSP90 (Heat Shock Protein 90) chaperone activity is fundamental for cell survival and contributes to different oncogenic signaling pathways. Indeed, agents targeting HSP90 function have shown therapeutic efficacy in several cancer types. We have examined the expression of HSP90 in different adrenal tumors and evaluated the use of HSP90 inhibitors in vitro as possible therapy for ACC. Methods: Immunohistochemical expression of HSP90 isoforms was investigated in different adrenocortical tumors and associated with clinical features. Additionally, a panel of N-terminal (17-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG), luminespib, and ganetespib) and C-terminal (novobiocin and silibinin) HSP90 inhibitors were tested on various ACC cell lines. Results: Within adrenocortical tumors, ACC samples exhibited the highest expression of HSP90β. Within a cohort of ACC patients, HSP90β expression levels were inversely correlated with recurrence-free and overall survival. In functional assays, among five different compounds tested luminespib and ganetespib induced a significant decrease in cell viability in single as well as in combined treatments with compounds of the clinically used EDP-M scheme (etoposide, doxorubicin, cisplatin, mitotane). Inhibition of cell viability correlated furthermore with a decrease in proliferation, in cell migration and an increase in apoptosis. Moreover, analysis of cancer pathways indicated a modulation of the ERK1/2—and AKT—pathways by luminespib and ganetespib treatment. Conclusions: Our findings emphasize HSP90 as a marker with prognostic impact and promising target with N-terminal HSP90 inhibitors as drugs with potential therapeutic efficacy toward ACC

    A rare case of familial Cushing's syndrome with a common presentation of weight gain due to a mutation of the PRKAR1A gene causing isolated primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: Cushing's syndrome (CS) is uncommon in childhood and adolescence. Variable presentation with subtle symptoms and signs can make diagnosis difficult. CASE REPORT: We report the case of a 17-year-old girl referred for acne and progressive weight gain with an adrenocorticotropic hormone-independent CS. A computed tomography scan of the adrenals showed normal-sized adrenal glands with discrete bilateral shape irregularity. Bilateral adrenalectomy was performed and the histopathological findings were characteristic of primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease (PPNAD). Genetic analysis confirmed a germline mutation of the PRKAR1A gene. The same mutation was found in her sister, mother, and maternal grandfather. Endocrine tests showed that the sister of our patient also presented PPNAD requiring bilateral adrenalectomy and a similar histopathological pattern was observed. No other features of Carney complex was found among all affected members of the family. CONCLUSION: It is exceptional for PPNAD to be an isolated phenomenon as well as being revealed by progressive weight gain in adolescenc
    corecore