Evaluation of adrenal incidentalomas: Current approaches, caveats, and unexplored issues.

IF 1.5 Q3 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Eleni Kouroglou, Vasiliki Tsiama, Evaggelia Stroumpouli, Christos Savvidis, Efthymia Kallistrou, Dimitra Ragia, Dimitra Motsiou, Stella Proikaki, Konstantinos Belis, Ioannis Ilias
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Abstract

The widespread use of high-resolution cross-sectional imaging over the past two decades has resulted in a marked increase - estimated at nearly ten-fold - in the incidental detection of adrenal masses greater than 1 cm, commonly termed adrenal incidentalomas (ADIs). A fundamental principle in their evaluation is the distinction between "true ADIs" - identified in patients without a history of malignancy or clinical suspicion of adrenal disease - and adrenal lesions detected during oncologic staging. This distinction is critical because the pre-test probability of malignancy differs substantially between these groups. In patients undergoing cancer staging, approximately half of adrenal masses may represent metastatic disease, whereas in true ADI populations, the risk of malignancy is typically below 1%. Failure to differentiate these populations risks inappropriate extrapolation of benign-prevalence data into high-risk oncologic contexts. The evaluation of an ADI has two primary objectives: Exclusion of malignancy and identification of hormonal hypersecretion. Although most ADIs are benign and nonfunctional, biochemical screening remains mandatory in most patients, except in those with limited life expectancy or critical illness. Mild autonomous cortisol secretion is the most prevalent functional abnormality, affecting 20% to 50% of patients, and is associated with increased cardiovascular, metabolic, and osseous morbidity. Cardiovascular event rates of 15.5% over approximately 50-60 months have been reported in affected populations. Radiological paradigms are evolving. A homogeneous lesion with attenuation ≤ 10 Hounsfield units on non-contrast computed tomography remains highly specific for a benign lipid-rich adenoma and, according to current European Society of Endocrinology guidance, requires no further imaging follow-up irrespective of size. Emerging evidence, however, suggests that in true ADIs < 4 cm, expanding the benignity threshold to ≤ 20 Hounsfield units may maintain a positive predictive value of 99.4%-99.8% while reducing unnecessary follow-up imaging. Conversely, the historical reliance on adrenal washout computed tomography is increasingly questioned due to limitations in excluding pheochromocytoma and concerns regarding cost-effectiveness. Future research priorities include prospective validation of expanded radiological thresholds, rigorous cost-effectiveness analyses, systematic assessment of psychiatric and quality-of-life outcomes, and evaluation of proposed etiological hypotheses.

肾上腺偶发瘤的评估:目前的方法、注意事项和未探索的问题。
在过去的二十年中,高分辨率横断面成像的广泛使用导致偶然发现的大于1厘米的肾上腺肿块(通常称为肾上腺偶发瘤(ADIs))显著增加,估计增加了近十倍。他们评估的一个基本原则是区分“真正的ADIs”(在没有恶性肿瘤病史或临床怀疑肾上腺疾病的患者中发现)和在肿瘤分期期间检测到的肾上腺病变。这种区别是至关重要的,因为这些组之间的恶性肿瘤的检测前概率有很大差异。在接受癌症分期的患者中,大约一半的肾上腺肿块可能代表转移性疾病,而在真正的ADI人群中,恶性肿瘤的风险通常低于1%。如果不能区分这些人群,就有可能将良性患病率数据不适当地外推到高危肿瘤环境中。ADI的评估有两个主要目的:排除恶性肿瘤和确定激素分泌过多。尽管大多数ADIs是良性的和无功能的,生化筛查对大多数患者仍然是强制性的,除了那些预期寿命有限或危重疾病的患者。轻度自主皮质醇分泌是最常见的功能异常,影响20%至50%的患者,并与心血管、代谢和骨骼发病率增加有关。据报告,受影响人群在大约50-60个月内的心血管事件发生率为15.5%。放射学范式在不断发展。非对比ct上衰减≤10 Hounsfield单位的均匀病变仍然是良性富脂腺瘤的高度特异性,根据目前欧洲内分泌学会的指导,无论大小,都不需要进一步的影像学随访。然而,新出现的证据表明,在真正的ADIs < 4 cm时,将良性阈值扩大到≤20 Hounsfield单位,可以保持99.4%-99.8%的阳性预测值,同时减少不必要的随访成像。相反,由于排除嗜铬细胞瘤的局限性和对成本效益的担忧,对肾上腺冲洗计算机断层扫描的历史依赖越来越受到质疑。未来的研究重点包括扩大放射阈值的前瞻性验证,严格的成本效益分析,对精神病学和生活质量结果的系统评估,以及对提出的病因假设的评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
World journal of radiology
World journal of radiology RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING-
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