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Case Reports

Effective multimodal management of a giant adrenocortical carcinoma

, , ORCID Icon, , & ORCID Icon
Pages 444-447 | Received 19 Jan 2022, Accepted 05 Feb 2022, Published online: 17 Feb 2022
 

Abstract

Background

Adrenocortical carcinoma is a rare and aggressive tumour. The only curative treatment is surgery with negative margins. In most series, the average lesion size ranges from 5.5 to 15 cm.

Methods

We report the case of a 27-year-old female with hyperandrogenism and Cushing syndrome due to a right adrenocortical carcinoma of 19.7 cm.

Results

The tumour abutting on liver and vena cava and the presence two nodules in liver required extensive surgery including a right posterior sectionectomy and an en bloc resection of the adrenal mass together with the right kidney and the gallbladder. The vena cava was also resected with a reconstruction using a pericardial patch since it was invaded on its border. Pathological examination confirmed an adrenocortical carcinoma, with tumour invasion of vessels, tumour capsule, vena cava and two metastases in the liver (pT4N0M1). All margins were negative. Three months after surgery, two lung nodules, cardio-phrenic and internal mammary adenomegalies were noticed on a PET/CT scan, justifying the initiation of chemotherapy, alongside with mitotane. After a 10-month follow-up, CT scan was stable excepted for a lung nodule growing from 4 to 7 mm. Targeted stereotaxic radiotherapy was then administered. Twenty-two months after surgery, the patient has improved considerably and all signs of hyperandrogenism and Cushing syndrome have resolved.

Conclusion

This case of adrenocortical carcinoma illustrates one of the largest tumours among those reported. It demonstrates the feasibility and effectiveness of a multimodal approach in its treatment even if it is giant and at high risk.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no conflict of interest.

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