Rare Presentation of Adrenocortical Carcinoma in a 4-Month-Old Boy
Sonali Malhotraª, e, Apoorva R. Waikarb, Prabhsimranjot Singh“, Ludovico Guarinid, Elka Jacobson-Dickmana, Roja Motaghedia, Irina Kazachkovaª
Abstract
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare malignancy and even rarer in infancy. Most of these tumors in pediatric age group are hormo- nally active and predominantly present with virilization. Cortisol hy- persecretion presenting as Cushing syndrome is extremely rare and seen in older age groups. We report a 4-month-old infant who pre- sented with linear growth arrest and excessive weight gain in early infancy, consequently diagnosed with ACC. On long-term follow-up for 7 years, he remained metastasis free following surgical resection and was not treated with chemotherapy.
Keywords: Adrenocortical carcinoma; Cushing syndrome; Virilizing tumors
Introduction
Adrenocortical tumors comprise 0.2% of the pediatric cancers [1]. Overall, 25 new cases are expected to occur annually in pediatric population in the United States with an estimated annual incidence of 0.2 - 0.3 cases per 1 million individuals [2]. The typical age of presentation is mostly during the early childhood with a median age of 3 - 4 years, but also there is a second, smaller peak during adolescence [3] (Table 1 [4-14]). On rare occasions, adrenocortical tumors have been reported in infancy, but due to relatively infrequent occurrence in this age group, information on the clinical course, long-term out-
comes and prognosis is sparse.
Case Report
A 4-month-old male infant presented to the emergency depart- ment with a 3-day history of vomiting, diarrhea and difficulty breathing. Excessive and rapid weight gain was noted by the parents since the age of 2 months. The baby was previously healthy and born at term with a birth weight of 3.62 kg; the pregnancy and delivery were uncomplicated. There was no family history of consanguinity, malignancies, unexplained childhood deaths or stillbirth.
On a detailed physical exam, the baby was noted to have Cushingoid facies, poor muscle tone and excessive fat pad on the back and arms (Fig. 1). Notably, his length was 54 cm (be- low the 1st percentile) and the weight was disproportionately elevated at 6.7 kg (50th percentile). He was obese with weight for length ratio more than 99th percentile for the comparable age and sex. His blood pressure was elevated for age, ranging from 93 - 121 to 40 - 73 mm Hg. A large abdominal mass was palpable on the left lower quadrant and the borders were dif- ficult to define. He had a prepubertal genital examination with no overt virilization; his phallus was typical in size but buried in the suprapubic fat pad. Neither acne, adult body odor, nor axillary hair was noted on examination.
In light of the respiratory distress, a chest radiograph was obtained and demonstrated bilateral upper lobe infiltrates, and henceforth he was admitted with a working diagnosis of pneu- monia.
While being treated in the hospital for pneumonia, an evaluation was launched to delineate the etiology of the exces- sive weight gain, growth arrest, hypotonia and the abdominal mass. Laboratory evaluation revealed consistently elevated serum cortisol levels, irrespective of the time of the day with values of 73.0 µg/dL at 5:08 am and 68.6 µg/dL at 12:50 pm (normal range 4 - 22 µg/dL). Serum adrenocorticotropic hor- mone (ACTH) was suppressed at 7 pg/mL, at 5:16 am (normal range 0 - 60 pg/mL), suggestive of a primary adrenal cortisol hypersecretion. Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) was mildly elevated at 115 µg/dL (normal range 16 - 96 µg/ dL), but clinical features of hyperandrogenism were absent. The aldosterone level was normal at 23 ng/dL with a slightly elevated renin of 43.51 ng/mL/h. There was a slight increase in urine vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) and metanephrines, ex-
ªDepartment of Pediatric Endocrinology, Infant and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA
bDepartment of Pediatrics, Brooklyn Hospital Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA “Department of Hematology Oncology, Maimonides Cancer Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA
dDepartment of Pediatric Hematology Oncology, Maimonides Medical Cent- er, Brooklyn, NY, USA
eCorresponding Author: Sonali Malhotra, Department of Pediatric Endocrinol- ogy, Infant and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn, Maimonides Medical Center, 977 48th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11219, USA.
Email: sonalimalhotra13@gmail.com
doi: https://doi.org/10.14740/wjon1036w
| Author | Age at diagnosis | Sex | Presentation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fudge et al [4] | 6 months | F | Isolated Cushing's |
| Garge et al [5] | 3 months | M | Isolated Cushing's |
| De Leon et al [6] | 2 months | M | Isolated Cushing's |
| Romaguera et al [7] | 4 years | F | Cushingoid features, virilization |
| Kanmaz et al [8] | 4 years | F | Abdominal pain, non-functional tumor |
| Breidbart et al [9] | 3 years and 5 months | F | Virilization |
| Kim et al [10] | 8 years and 2 months | M | Virilization, peripheral precocious puberty |
| Arico et al [11] | 2 years | F | Virilization |
| Wong et al [12] | 12 years | F | Secondary amenorrhea, virilization, Cushing's syndrome |
| Sorgo et al [13] | 12 years and 10 months | F | Virilization |
| Ghazizadeh et al [14] | 2 years | F | Virilization, heterosexual pseudoprecocious puberty |
cluding a pheochromocytoma. An ultrasound demonstrated a 6.8 × 7.7 cm size solid mass at the upper pole of left kidney. A subsequent computerized tomography scan confirmed a large left-sided soft tissue mass with internal necrosis and a well- defined capsule abutting the left kidney with non-visualization of the left adrenal gland (Fig. 2). Henceforth, presumptive di- agnosis of a functional cortisol producing adrenal tumor was made.
The baby underwent exploratory laparotomy and a left adrenalectomy was performed. Intraoperative findings re- vealed a 9.0 × 7.0 × 5.0 cm (315 cm3), well-encapsulated tu- mor weighing 180 g without breach of the capsule. The tumor was resected completely. There were no other signs of tumor
spread including no liver metastasis or suspicious periaortic lymph nodes. Histological classification confirmed a high- grade adrenocortical carcinoma (24 mitotic figures/50 HPF) with a few pleomorphic nuclei (Fig. 3). The tumor was finally classified an adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC), stage 2 (based on combined American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC)/ International Union Against Cancer (UICC) classification). During the perioperative period, the baby was treated with stress dosing of hydrocortisone and had an uneventful recov- ery. He continued to receive maintenance doses of hydrocorti- sone which were subsequently weaned. No adjuvant treatment with mitotane was done. During the recovery period, his linear growth velocity improved and his weight normalized (Fig. 4).
a
CRILIK
b
Yearly follow-ups for the next 4 years and then most recently at 7 years and 10 months after treatment indicate continued health and successful recovery (Fig. 1).
Discussion
To date, there are only three well-described cases published in early infancy [4-6] but only one of which has information
regarding long-term follow-up and prognosis. De Leon et al reported an affected male infant who was diagnosed at the age of 2 months with metastatic stage IV ACC who was treated with chemotherapy with mitotane for pulmonary metastasis and his 15-year course [6]. Herein, we report a second case of an infant with long-term follow-up who remained metasta- sis free following surgical resection and was not treated with chemotherapy.
Two national registries list infants with ACC but detailed case description is not offered [15, 16]. The Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database for ACC in patients younger than 20 years of age, estimated an over- all 5-year survival of 57% for all subjects. The SEER study also included subjects younger than 4 years, and estimated the 5-year survival for this younger group to be 91.1% [16]. The largest report by International Pediatric Adrenocortical Tumor Registry (IPACTR) included data from 254 pediatric patients with 18 infants younger than the age of 1 [15]. For all children, younger than 4 years with completely resected tumors weighing less than 200 g and without metastasis, the overall 5-year event free survival rate for infants was 91%. The report did not provide comments on outcomes of infantile ACC cases, specifically.
It is important to note that, unlike adults, in children the majority of adrenocortical cancers are functional with 80-90% having endocrine manifestations and, distinctively, virilization is reported to be present in > 80% of cases [2, 3]. However, in adults, adrenal hormone overproduction at presentation is reported to be around 40-60% and most commonly is hyper-
a
b
c
d
Birth to 36 months: Boys
NAME
Length-for-age and Weight-for-age percentiles
RECORD #
Birth
3
6
9
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
33
36
in
cm
41
AGE (MONTHS)
cm
in
41
L
40
100
95
40
39
100
E
90
39
N
38
75
95
95
38
G
37
50
37
T
25
H
36
35
90
10
90
36
5
35
34
33
85
32
80
95
17
38
31
L
30
90
16
36
E
29
75
N
G
28
70
75
34
T
27
15
H
32
26
65
50
25
14
30
W
24
60
25
13
E
23
28
1
22
55
10
5
12
G
H
21
26
T
20
50
11
19
24
18
45
10
22
17
16
40
9
20
-15
8
18
16
7
AGE (MONTHS)
16
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
33
36
kg
lb
14
W
6
Mother’s Stature
Gestational
E
12
Father’s Stature
Age:
Weeks
Comment
I
5
Date
Agemmo
Weightag
Lengthom
Head Circ.
G
-10
Birth
H
4
6.7
54.0
T
4
5
6.9
56.0
8
9
9.0
72.0
13
9.8
76.0
6
3
17
12.1
79.7
19
13.0
84.0
21
2
13.6
85.0
26
lb
15.1
89.1
kg
36
16.9
96.5
Birth
3
6
9
cortisolism [17]. A presumptive explanation is that the fetal adrenal cortex has two different zones, with the outer defini- tive zone being steroidogenically latent until late gestation and the inner zone producing steroid hormones throughout gesta- tion. The inner active fetal zone that is responsible for DHEAS makes up 85-90% of the total fetal adrenal cortex at birth and subsequently undergoes apoptosis thereafter [18]. Thus, it could explain the hormonally active nature of ACC in children, which, unlike our case, are more commonly androgen produc- ing versus cortisol secreting. In the largest report by IPACTR of 254 children with adrenocortical tumors, isolated Cushing’s syndrome was found in only 5.5% of the patients with a me- dian age of 12.6 years and henceforth tended to occur in the older children [15]. All 18 infants in this report had adrenal hormones overproduction [15]; however, the specific hormone
functionality was not clearly elaborated in this report.
Isolated cortisol producing tumor or Cushing’s syndrome is extremely rare in general (5% of patients) [15]. After ex- tensive medical literature review, our patient represents the fourth infantile ACC case, all of which presented with isolated Cushing’s syndrome. Whether isolated cortisol hypersecretion is more common in infantile ACC and even a proposed expla- nation for this phenomenon remains unclear.
Conclusion
ACC should be considered among patients with a history of rapid weight gain and growth failure, even in the absence of virilization. Based on the limited data on the long-term prog-
nosis of ACC in infancy, this age range seems to have a fa- vorable prognosis and in the few reported cases, early diagno- sis and surgical excision appears to have provided cure. This appears consistent with International Pediatric Adrenocortical Tumor Registry (IPACTR) describing a favorable prognosis of ACC in younger age range with complete resection of tumors less than 200 g [15].
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