Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2011) 26 P27

ECE2011 Poster Presentations Adrenal cortex (41 abstracts)

Do mitotane levels impact on the outcome of patients treated adjuvantly following radical resection of adrenocortical cancer (ACC)?

A Ardito 1 , A Al Ghuzian 2 , M Fassnacht 3 , F Daffara 1 , S Leboulleux 2 , S Wortmann 3 , B Zaggia 1 , S De Francia 1 , Marco Volante 4 , Luigi Gonzaga 5 , Alfredo Berruti 5 , Bruno Allolio 3 , Eric Baudin 2 & Massimo Terzolo 1


1Internal Medicine 1, Faculty of Medicine S. Luigi Gonzaga, University of Turin, Orbassano, Italy; 2Endocrine Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France; 3Department of Medicine I, University Hospital of Wurzburg, Wurzburg, Germany; 4Pathology, Faculty of Medicine S. Luigi Gonzaga, University of Turin, Orbassano, Italy; 5Medical Oncology, Faculty of Medicine S. Luigi Gonzaga, University of Turin, Orbassano, Italy.


We have demonstrated that adjuvant mitotane prolong recurrence free survival (RFS) in patients with radically resected ACC. Aim of the present study was to correlate mitotane levels with patient outcome in an adjuvant setting in 3 different referral centres in Europe. There were 120 patients (45 W, 75 M, median age 44 years, range 16–76) radically resected for ACC who were treated adjuvantly with mitotane from 1996 to 2010. ACC was stage I in 10 cases, II in 73, III in 31, IV in 6; 62 patients had secreting ACC. Forty patients were treated with 8–10 g/daily and 80 patients with 1–6 g/daily. Target mitotane concentrations of 14–20 mg/l were attained within 3 months from treatment start in 49 patients (41%), within 6 months in additional 61 patients (51%), while 10 patients (8%) never got them. Mitotane levels >14 mg/l were maintained in more than 75% of determinations in 64 patients (53%). Median duration of treatment was 25.5 months (range: 4–165) and median duration of follow-up was 36 months (6–165). Only 11 patients (9%) experienced severe adverse events (CTC 3), but none of the patients discontinued mitotane definitively for toxicity. At the last follow-up, 58 patients (48%) relapsed and 33 patients (27%) died. RFS was significantly longer in patients who attained target mitotane concentrations within 3 months (P=0.01) and in patients who maintained consistently levels >14 mg/l during follow-up (P=0.004). In a multivariate analysis (including sex, age, stage, number of mitoses or Ki-67 value) maintenance of target mitotane concentrations was an independent factor influencing RFS (HR=0.41, 95%CI 0.21–0.77; P=0.006). The effect on overall survival was significant only in univariate but not in multivariate analysis (HR=0.61, 0.26–1.43). The present data demonstrate for the first time that target mitotane concentrations may have a therapeutic impact in an adjuvant setting. This finding supports indirectly the efficacy of adjuvant mitotane treatment.

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