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Endocrine Abstracts (2014) 35 P528 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.35.P528

1Department of Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases, Clinic for Internal Medicine III, University Hospital Jena, Jena, Germany; 2Department of Pathology, University Hospital Jena, Jena, Germany.


Introduction: We retrospectively evaluated all patients with adrenal tumours treated in our Department from 1.1.1999 to 1.10.2013.

Patients and methods: 189 patients (110 females: 79 males, mean age of 57.5 years) were treated because of adrenal tumours. All patients underwent hormonal analysis and testing in order to check for hormonal activity. Tumours were classified according to gender, age at diagnosis, tumour localisation and size, as well as benignity and malignancy when postinterventional histopathological examination was conducted.

Results: 133 patients had non-hormone secreting tumours (non-functional incidentalomas; 70.4%), 18 pheochromocytoma (9.5%), 13 Conn-syndrome (6.9%), 12 adrenal Cushing’s disease (6.3%), one AGS and two sexual hormone-secreting tumours. Ten tumours could not be classified due to unclear test-results (5.3%). Cushing’s disease was present in 11 females and 1 male. 164 (87%) tumours were unilateral there of 96 (50.8%) on the left and 68 (36%) on the right and 25 (13.2%) patients had bilateral tumours. Tumour size <3 cm occurred in 120 (63.5%), 3–6 cm in 54 (28.6%) and >6 cm in 15 (7.9%) of the cases. 61 (32%) patients were operated, thereof 88.8% of the cases with hormone-active tumours, and 8 (4%) were evaluated with ultrasound-guided biopsy. Malignancy was diagnosed in ten individuals (5.3%; three non-functional tumours, three pheochromocytomas, two Cushing’s patients and two sexual-hormone secreting tumours) and benignity was confirmed in 56 (30%) patients. two surgical specimens with histopathological diagnosis of pheochromocytoma were suspicious of malignant alterations, one biopsy was not diagnostic.

Conclusions: Adrenal incidentaloma prevalence is rising due to widely available imaging devices. The majority is benign, of small size (<3 cm) and hormonally inactive. Adrenalectomy presents as the therapeutic method of choice in confirmed hormone-secreting tumours.

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