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Characteristics and outcomes of the Finnish ectopic ACTH syndrome cohort

Authors :
Leena Norvio
Timo Sane
Päivi O. Hämäläinen
Helena Leijon
Eeva Ryhänen
Minna Soinio
Camilla Schalin-Jäntti
Päivi Rautiainen
Tapani Ebeling
Leena Moilanen
Otto Knutar
Minna Koivikko
Sanna Toivanen
Saara Metso
Aura Arola
Tuula Pekkarinen
Niina Matikainen
Satu Vehkavaara
Marjo Tamminen
Source :
Endocrine. 74:387-395
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Ectopic ACTH syndrome (EAS) is rare. We established a national cohort to increase awareness and address unmet needs.The Finnish national EAS cohort includes 60 patients diagnosed in 1997-2016. We assessed clinical features, diagnostic work-ups, treatments, incidence, and outcomes of subgroups occult tumor (OT), well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor G1/G2 (NETG1/G2) and NET G3/neuroendocrine carcinoma (NETG3/NEC).The distribution of OT, NETG1/G2, and NETG3/NEC was 10 (17%), 20 (33%), and 30 (50%), respectively; and median follow-up 22 months (0-249). Annual incidence (0.20-0.93 per million inhabitants) and tumor subgroups (OT vs. NEC) varied across the country. The longest diagnostic delay from EAS onset to radiological tumor identification was 48 months. In NET/NEC, 6/50 (12%) were diagnosed 1-24 years before EAS onset. Osteoporotic fractures (32%) and severe infections (55%) were common. The CRH stimulation test accurately diagnosed EAS in 25/31 (81%). Metyrapone (≤6 g daily, prescribed in 88%) was well tolerated. In NETG1/G2, 13/20 (65%) underwent curative resection of the primary tumor; four experienced recurrence within 2-12 years. In OT, 70% underwent bilateral adrenalectomy. Five-year overall survival in OT, NETG1/G2, and NETG3/NEC was 90%, 55%, and 0%, respectively (P 0.001). Morning cortisol, hypokalemia, infections, metastatic disease, and acute onset were negative, whereas resection of the primary tumor and bilateral adrenalectomy were positive predictors of survival.NET/NEC may precede EAS onset by several years. In NETG1/G2, recurrences may occur10 years after successful primary surgery. Tumor subgroup (OT, NETG1/G2, NEC) was an independent predictor of survival.

Details

ISSN :
15590100, 1355008X, and 19972016
Volume :
74
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Endocrine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c0df2bdab0d7e77fcaad53432a5db078
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12020-021-02768-0