Adrenal Incidentaloma Flashcards
Adrenal masses discovered incidentally. Patient without signs of hormonal excess or obvious underlying malignancy:
Adrenal incidentaloma
Primary or metastatic tumor, granulomatous disease, hemorrhage, or lymphoma, 21-hydroxylase deficiency:
Differential diagnosis
Is a common benign tumor arising from the cortex of the adrenal gland:
Adrenal Cortical Adenoma
Is not considered to have the potential for malignant transformation:
Adrenal Cortical Adenoma
“Adrenal metastases may be found in as many as ____ of patients with known primary lesions”:
25%
Frequently face the task of determining whether an adrenal mass is benign or malignant:
Radiologist
Treatment for a hormonally active (functional) adrenal tumor:
Adrenalectomy
Treatment for a Malignant Adrenal Tumor:
depends on the cell type, spread, and location of the primary tumor
Surgical excision in nonfunctional adrenal cortical adenomas:
Not indicated, because they’re not premalignant
Chromosomal and genetic abnormalities (genes coding for p53 and p57):
Etiology
“In about _____ of all cases, abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans that are obtained for reasons other than the evaluation for possible adrenal neoplasm demonstrate an adrenal mass”:
1-5%
“The autopsy prevalence for AIs is ____”:
2-9%
The most important hormonally silent AI is:
Pheochromocytoma
“Prevalence increases with age; <1% for patients <30 years and is ____ for patients >70 years”:
7%
AI prevalence is higher in:
White people, old, obese, hypertensive and diabetic