Clinical course and imaging characteristics of benign adrenal cysts: a single-center study of 92 patients

Objective Benign adrenal cysts are rare lesions of the adrenal glands. Limited data are available to guide management. We aimed to describe the presentation and outcomes of patients with benign adrenal cysts. Design Retrospective longitudinal cohort study. Methods Consecutive patients with histologi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEuropean journal of endocrinology Vol. 187; no. 3; pp. 429 - 437
Main Authors Dogra, Prerna, Rivera, Michael, McKenzie, Travis J, Foster, Trenton R, Dy, Benzon M, Lyden, Melanie L, Young, William F, Bancos, Irina
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol Bioscientifica Ltd 01.09.2022
Oxford University Press
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Objective Benign adrenal cysts are rare lesions of the adrenal glands. Limited data are available to guide management. We aimed to describe the presentation and outcomes of patients with benign adrenal cysts. Design Retrospective longitudinal cohort study. Methods Consecutive patients with histologically or radiologically confirmed adrenal cysts between 1995 and 2021 were identified. Pheochromocytomas and malignancy were excluded. Results Benign adrenal cysts were diagnosed in 92 patients (53, 57% women) at a median age of 45 years. Mode of discovery was incidental on imaging in 81 (88%), symptoms of mass effect in 9 (9.8%), and others in 2 (2.2%). Majority (89, 97%) of patients had unilateral cysts (45 right, 44 left) with a median size of 48 mm (range 4–200) at diagnosis. On imaging, most cysts were round/oval (85.4%), homogenous (83.2%) lesions with calcifications (64.0%) and no vascular enhancement (97.7%). During a median follow-up of 65 months (range 7–288), adrenal cysts demonstrated minimal enlargement (median size change 6 mm, median growth rate 2 mm/year). On hormonal evaluation, 10% (5/50 tested) had an abnormal overnight dexamethasone suppression test, and 9.5% (4/42 tested) had an abnormal case detection testing for primary aldosteronism. Patients treated with adrenalectomy (46, 50%) were younger (36.9 years vs 50.8 years, P = 0.0009) and had more rapidly enlarging cysts (median growth rate 5.5 mm/year vs 0.4 mm/year, P = 0.0002). Conclusion Benign adrenal cysts are usually incidentally discovered, non-functional, homogenous lesions without vascular enhancement that demonstrate minimal growth. Adrenalectomy should be reserved for patients with heterogeneous lesions, abnormal hormonal evaluation, or those with mass effect symptoms.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0804-4643
1479-683X
DOI:10.1530/EJE-22-0285