Phaeochromocytoma

This PatientPlus article is written for healthcare professionals so the language may be more technical than the condition leaflets. You may find the abbreviations list helpful.

A phaeochromocytoma is a rare tumour that secretes catecholamines. It is derived from chromaffin cells, usually in the adrenal medulla but occasionally extra-adrenal phaeochromocytomas or paragangliomas occur.[1] Many but not all authors define phaeochromocytoma as coming from the adrenal medulla and if the tumour is similar but located elsewhere, it is called a paraganglioma.

The excessive production of catecholamines may cause life-threatening hypertension or cardiac arrhythmias. If the diagnosis is overlooked, the result can be disastrous or fatal but if this rare tumour is diagnosed it is curable.

Up to one third of all symptomatic presentations of phaeochromocytoma or paraganglioma are due to germline mutations in one of six genes defining multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease, neurofibromatosis type 1 and the paraganglioma syndromes types 1, 3 and 4.[2]

The name is of Greek etymology. Phios means dusky, chroma means colour and cytoma means tumour. This refers to the colour of tumour cells when stained with chromium salts. 10-15% of phaeochromocytomas are malignant.

A normal adrenal medulla secretes in response to neural control and produces about 85% adrenaline. These tumours are not innervated and the stimulus for secretion is unknown. They may secrete constantly or intermittently. The familial type tends to produce mostly noradrenaline but the sporadic type produces mostly adrenaline. Dopamine may also be produced.

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  • They occur in between 0.5 and 2 in 1,000 patients with hypertension but patients may be normotensive or have a labile blood pressure.
  • 10-15% of phaeochromocytomas are malignant, 18% extra-adrenal and 20% familial.[3]
  • In a retrospective study from the Mayo Clinic, the diagnosis was made at autopsy in nearly half the cases. In 10% the diagnosis is an incidental finding.[4]
  • There is no sex difference in incidence or any particular racial predisposition.
  • Diagnosis is usually made between the third and the fifth decades.
  • Approximately 10% occur in children.
  • In children, 50% are solitary adrenal tumours, 25% are bilateral and 25% are extra-adrenal. They are more likely to be familial than those presenting in adults.[5]

Inherited forms

  • Phaeochromocytomas occur in certain familial syndromes, including:
  • It was thought that 10% of cases represent inherited syndromes but this figure may be up to 30%.[6]
  • Phaeochromocytomas occur bilaterally in 70% of MEN syndromes.
  • Neurofibromatosis has a 1% incidence of phaeochromocytoma.
  • The VHL syndrome is associated with phaeochromocytomas, cerebellar haemangioblastomas and renal cell carcinoma.

Symptoms are intermittent and may vary from once a month to several times a day with duration from seconds to hours. With time they tend to get more frequent and more severe.

There are a number of symptoms that may present but the first four are in bold as they are almost invariably present:

  • Headache
  • Profuse sweating
  • Palpitations
  • Tremor
  • Nausea
  • Weakness
  • Anxiety
  • Sense of doom
  • Epigastric pain
  • Flank pain
  • Constipation
  • Weight loss

Persons with familial phaeochromocytoma may be asymptomatic.[7]

Again, the most common features are in bold:

  • Hypertension but it may be paroxysmal in 50%.
  • Postural hypotension.
  • Tremor.
  • Hypertensive retinopathy.
  • Pallor.
  • Fever.
  • Acute hypertension with a tumour that releases predominantly noradrenaline may cause reflex bradycardia.

Neurofibromas may be felt and café au lait patches may be seen.

Blood tests

  • Blood glucose is often raised.
  • Calcium may be elevated.
  • Haemoglobin is elevated due to haemoconcentration from reduction in circulating volume.
  • Plasma catecholamines and plasma metanephrines (the o-methylated metabolites of catecholamines) have both been used in diagnosis.[8]

Urine

  • 24-hour urine collection is required for creatinine (to assure full 24-hour specimen), total catecholamines, vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) and metanephrines.[4]
  • The bottle for collection should be dark and acidified and should be kept cold to avoid degradation of the catecholamines.
  • Preferably collect urine immediately after a crisis.
  • Physical stress and a number of drugs may interfere with the assay and cause false elevation of metanephrines. Drugs include tricyclic antidepressants, alcohol, levodopa, labetalol, sotalol, amfetamines, benzodiazepines and chlorpromazine.
  • IVMA has a false positive rate in excess of 15%.One study found that of all urine and blood tests, urine free metanephrines produced the best results.[8]

Imaging

After biochemical confirmation of a tumour, imaging is necessary to locate it.[9]

  • 90% of phaeochromocytomas are in the adrenal glands and 98% within the abdomen.
  • Extra-adrenal phaeochromocytomas develop in chromaffin tissue of the sympathetic nervous system and can occur anywhere from the base of the brain to the urinary bladder.
  • Common locations for extra-adrenal phaeochromocytomas include close to the origin of the inferior mesenteric artery, bladder wall, heart, mediastinum and carotid and glomus jugulare tumours.

Various techniques may be employed:

  • MRI can locate all tumours within the adrenals.
  • CT is less sensitive and detects around 85-95% of tumours in excess of 1 cm in diameter.
  • If phaeochromocytoma is confirmed biochemically but CT or MRI do not show a tumour, a scan with metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) labelled with 131 iodine or 123 iodine may be performed.[10] The molecular structure of MIBG is similar to noradrenaline and concentrates within adrenal or extra-adrenal phaeochromocytomas.
  • A somatostatin receptor analogue called pentetreotide, labelled with 111 indium is less sensitive than MIBG but may be used to detect phaeochromocytomas that do not concentrate MIBG.[5]
  • Positron emission tomography (PET) scanning appears promising but is still in fairly early stages of assessment.[11]

The preference for MRI over CT scanning is in contrast to tumours of the adrenal cortex as described in Cushing's syndrome and the adrenal cortex.

Genetic testing

Tumour location and number, age, gender and family history will point to the need for genetic testing. Such testing forms the basis of early diagnosis and follow-up including management of relatives.[2]

Histology

Histological assessment of tissue removed after surgery using certain criteria (the PASS system) can help to differentiate benign from malignant tumours. A PASS score of <4 is predictive of benign phaeochromocytomas, whereas a score greater than 6 is characteristic of malignant tumours. Such patients should be followed closely for recurrence.[12]

Any of the following may precipitate a hypertensive crisis:

  • Induction of anaesthesia.
  • Opiates.
  • Dopamine antagonists.
  • Decongestants such as pseudoephedrine.
  • Drugs that inhibit the reuptake of catecholamines, including tricyclic antidepressants and cocaine.
  • X-ray contrast media.
  • Childbirth.

If the urine test for total catecholamines, VMA and metanephrines are positive, the main differential diagnosis is to decide if is it is part of a familial condition.

  • There may be a family history.
  • Bilateral tumours suggest MEN.
  • There may be features of neurofibromatosis including café au lait spots.
  • VHL disease is associated with phaeochromocytomas, cerebellar haemangioblastomas and renal cell carcinoma.

Other considerations include:

Associated conditions must be sought and, if found, appropriate management includes genetic counselling.

Surgical resection of the tumour is the treatment of choice and usually results in cure of the hypertension. Pre-operative treatment with alpha-blockers and beta-blockers is required to control blood pressure and prevent intraoperative hypertensive crises.[4]

  • Alpha blockade with phenoxybenzamine is started at least 7 to 10 days before operation to allow for expansion of blood volume.
  • Only once this is achieved is beta blockade considered. If beta blockade is started too soon, unopposed alpha stimulation can precipitate a hypertensive crisis.
  • Calcium-channel blockers are also useful.[13]
  • Complete resection of the tumour is usually possible and surgical mortality rates are less than 2 or 3% with an experienced anaesthetist and surgeon.
  • Laparoscopic surgery is being used more often for tumours smaller than 6 cm but for larger tumours, an open operation is probably safer.[14]

After surgery, a 24-hour urine collection for total catecholamines, metanephrines and VMA is required two weeks after operation. If results are normal, the prognosis is excellent. Make sure that hypertension is controlled or resolved. Check 24-hour urine and blood pressure annually for five years.

Sometimes, when a patient is being investigated for hypertension, a mass may be found in an adrenal gland. This may represent phaeochromocytoma, glucocorticoid excess or primary aldosteronism. The mass may even be irrelevant and misleading. Such findings are called 'incidentalomas'. If the clinical history or physical examination of a patient with unilateral incidentaloma suggests glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid, adrenal sex hormone or catecholamine excess, which is confirmed biochemically, the treatment of choice is often adrenalectomy.[15] In one study of 201 patients with incidentalomas, 30% were found to have a phaeochromocytoma.[16]

In the rare malignant cases, palliative care may be achieved with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. New emerging therapies, such as the tyrosine kinase inhibitor sunitinib, which rectifies the results of genetic abnormalities, may revolutionise the treatment of malignancy in the future.[17]

The five-year survival rate for non-malignant phaeochromocytoma is over 95% but for malignant phaeochromocytomas it is less than 50%. The risk of malignancy is rather higher when children are affected.[18]

Most paragangliomas arise from chromaffin tissue, along the para-aortic sympathetic chain, or within the organs of Zuckerkandl at the origin of the inferior mesenteric artery, the wall of the urinary bladder and the sympathetic chain in the neck or mediastinum. They are usually benign and amenable to surgical resection. Around half are hereditary and so genetic testing should be considered.[19] They can recur many years after initial presentation, so long-term follow-up is important.[1]

Pre-eclampsia is fairly common, whilst phaeochromocytoma is very rare and only a few hundred cases in pregnancy have been reported in the literature.

  • If phaeochromocytoma is diagnosed for the first time in pregnancy, there are special concerns with a maternal and fetal mortality rate of 48% and 55% respectively.
  • If diagnosis precedes pregnancy, the outcome is vastly better. Alpha-adrenergic blockade with phenoxybenzamine is required as soon as the diagnosis is made.
  • If surgery is performed in the first or second trimester, the pregnancy need not be terminated but fetal loss is high.
  • In the third trimester, as soon as fetal lung maturity is confirmed, perform lower segment caesarean section (LSCS) followed by surgical removal of the tumour.[20]
  • Conservative management during pregnancy has been described.[21]

Further reading & references

  1. Joynt KE, Moslehi JJ, Baughman KL; Paragangliomas: etiology, presentation, and management. Cardiol Rev. 2009 Jul-Aug;17(4):159-64.
  2. Neumann HP, Eng C; The approach to the patient with paraganglioma. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2009 Aug;94(8):2677-83.
  3. Manger WM, Eisenhofer G; Pheochromocytoma: diagnosis and management update. Curr Hypertens Rep. 2004 Dec;6(6):477-84.
  4. Blake MA; Pheochromocytoma, Medscape, Feb 2013
  5. Havekes B, Romijn JA, Eisenhofer G, et al; Update on pediatric pheochromocytoma. Pediatr Nephrol. 2009 May;24(5):943-50. Epub 2008 Jun 20.
  6. Benn DE, Robinson BG; Genetic basis of phaeochromocytoma and paraganglioma. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2006 Sep;20(3):435-50.
  7. Manger WM; The Protean Manifestations of Pheochromocytoma. Horm Metab Res. 2009 Feb 25.
  8. Boyle JG, Davidson DF, Perry CG, et al; Comparison of diagnostic accuracy of urinary free metanephrines, vanillyl mandelic Acid, and catecholamines and plasma catecholamines for diagnosis of pheochromocytoma. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2007 Dec;92(12):4602-8. Epub 2007 Jul 17.
  9. Westphal SA; Diagnosis of a pheochromocytoma. Am J Med Sci. 2005 Jan;329(1):18-21.
  10. Widimsky J Jr; Recent advances in the diagnosis and treatment of pheochromocytoma. Kidney Blood Press Res. 2006;29(5):321-6. Epub 2006 Nov 21.
  11. Zapanti E, Ilias I; Pheochromocytoma: physiopathologic implications and diagnostic evaluation. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2006 Nov;1088:346-60.
  12. Strong VE, Kennedy T, Al-Ahmadie H, et al; Prognostic indicators of malignancy in adrenal pheochromocytomas: clinical, histopathologic, and cell cycle/apoptosis gene expression analysis. Surgery. 2008 Jun;143(6):759-68. Epub 2008 Apr 14.
  13. Bravo EL; Pheochromocytoma: current perspectives in the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management. Arq Bras Endocrinol Metabol. 2004 Oct;48(5):746-50. Epub 2005 Mar 7.
  14. Wilhelm SM, Prinz RA, Barbu AM, et al; Analysis of large versus small pheochromocytomas: operative approaches and patient outcomes. Surgery. 2006 Oct;140(4):553-9; discussion 559-60. Epub 2006 Sep 7.
  15. Cicala MV, Sartorato P, Mantero F; Incidentally discovered masses in hypertensive patients. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2006 Sep;20(3):451-66.
  16. Kopetschke R, Slisko M, Kilisli A, et al; Frequent incidental discovery of phaeochromocytoma: data from a German cohort of 201 phaeochromocytoma. Eur J Endocrinol. 2009 Aug;161(2):355-61. Epub 2009 Jun 4.
  17. Santarpia L, Habra MA, Jimenez C; Malignant Pheochromocytomas and Paragangliomas: Molecular Signaling Pathways and Emerging Therapies. Horm Metab Res. 2009 Apr 2.
  18. Pham TH, Moir C, Thompson GB, et al; Pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma in children: a review of medical and surgical management at a tertiary care center. Pediatrics. 2006 Sep;118(3):1109-17.
  19. Young WF Jr; Paragangliomas: clinical overview. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2006 Aug;1073:21-9.
  20. Grodski S, Jung C, Kertes P, et al; Phaeochromocytoma in pregnancy. Intern Med J. 2006 Sep;36(9):604-6.
  21. Miller C, Bernet V, Elkas JC, et al; Conservative management of extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma during pregnancy. Obstet Gynecol. 2005 May;105(5 Pt 2):1185-8.
Original Author: Dr Laurence Knott Current Version: Peer Reviewer: Dr Adrian Bonsall
Last Checked: 01/03/2013 Document ID: 2604  Version: 22 © EMIS

Disclaimer: This article is for information only and should not be used for the diagnosis or treatment of medical conditions. EMIS has used all reasonable care in compiling the information but make no warranty as to its accuracy. Consult a doctor or other health care professional for diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions. For details see our conditions.

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