TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinical Spectrum of Pheochromocytoma
AU - Guerrero, Marlon A.
AU - Schreinemakers, Jennifer M.J.
AU - Vriens, Menno R.
AU - Suh, Insoo
AU - Hwang, Jimmy
AU - Shen, Wen T.
AU - Gosnell, Jessica
AU - Clark, Orlo H.
AU - Duh, Quan Yang
PY - 2009/12
Y1 - 2009/12
N2 - Background: Pheochromocytomas vary in presentation, tumor size, and in catecholamine production. Whether pheochromocytoma size correlates with hormone levels, clinical presentation, and perioperative complications is not known. The goal of this study was to determine if tumor size and hormone level correlate according to the clinical presentation at diagnosis. Study Design: We retrospectively analyzed all patients who underwent an adrenalectomy with a diagnosis of a pheochromocytoma from February 1996 to October 2008. We grouped patients according to their clinical presentation at diagnosis (routine biochemical screening, incidentaloma, classic symptoms, pheochromocytoma crisis) and obtained preoperative radiographic tumor size and catecholamine hormone levels. ANOVA was used for the group effects and the Kruskal-Wallis rank test was used for pairwise comparison between groups with the Sidak/Bonferroni method for multiplicity adjustment according to age, tumor size, and hormone level. The Pearson correlation coefficient was then calculated to determine if hormone level correlated with tumor size. Results: Eighty-one of 107 patients had data available for complete analysis. The average age at diagnosis for all patients was 47.1 years, and the average tumor size was 4.9 cm. The average highest hormone ratio among all patients was 27.4. Tumor size and hormone ratio levels differed among all groups (p ≤ 0.03). A direct correlation (p = 0.014) was apparent between tumor size and hormone level. Complication rates also differed among the four groups of patients (p ≤ 0.02). Conclusions: Our study showed that tumor size directly correlates with hormone level. Smaller tumors tend to secrete lower levels of catecholamines, but larger tumors have a wider variation in secretory potential. Larger tumors, however, produced the highest hormone ratios.
AB - Background: Pheochromocytomas vary in presentation, tumor size, and in catecholamine production. Whether pheochromocytoma size correlates with hormone levels, clinical presentation, and perioperative complications is not known. The goal of this study was to determine if tumor size and hormone level correlate according to the clinical presentation at diagnosis. Study Design: We retrospectively analyzed all patients who underwent an adrenalectomy with a diagnosis of a pheochromocytoma from February 1996 to October 2008. We grouped patients according to their clinical presentation at diagnosis (routine biochemical screening, incidentaloma, classic symptoms, pheochromocytoma crisis) and obtained preoperative radiographic tumor size and catecholamine hormone levels. ANOVA was used for the group effects and the Kruskal-Wallis rank test was used for pairwise comparison between groups with the Sidak/Bonferroni method for multiplicity adjustment according to age, tumor size, and hormone level. The Pearson correlation coefficient was then calculated to determine if hormone level correlated with tumor size. Results: Eighty-one of 107 patients had data available for complete analysis. The average age at diagnosis for all patients was 47.1 years, and the average tumor size was 4.9 cm. The average highest hormone ratio among all patients was 27.4. Tumor size and hormone ratio levels differed among all groups (p ≤ 0.03). A direct correlation (p = 0.014) was apparent between tumor size and hormone level. Complication rates also differed among the four groups of patients (p ≤ 0.02). Conclusions: Our study showed that tumor size directly correlates with hormone level. Smaller tumors tend to secrete lower levels of catecholamines, but larger tumors have a wider variation in secretory potential. Larger tumors, however, produced the highest hormone ratios.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2009.09.022
DO - 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2009.09.022
M3 - Article
C2 - 19959041
AN - SCOPUS:70549091056
SN - 1072-7515
VL - 209
SP - 727
EP - 732
JO - Journal of the American College of Surgeons
JF - Journal of the American College of Surgeons
IS - 6
ER -