Browsing by Author "Patrova, Jekaterina (57190412594)"
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Publication Age-dependent and sex-dependent disparity in mortality in patients with adrenal incidentalomas and autonomous cortisol secretion: an international, retrospective, cohort study(2022) ;Deutschbein, Timo (6506626557) ;Reimondo, Giuseppe (6701516556) ;Di Dalmazi, Guido (35740075100) ;Bancos, Irina (26648031900) ;Patrova, Jekaterina (57190412594) ;Vassiliadi, Dimitra Argyro (24923678900) ;Nekić, Anja Barač (57660092100) ;Debono, Miguel (15925215900) ;Lardo, Pina (57193359349) ;Ceccato, Filippo (26031227200) ;Petramala, Luigi (57203239880) ;Prete, Alessandro (55763975300) ;Chiodini, Iacopo (6603956822) ;Ivović, Miomira (6507747450) ;Pazaitou-Panayiotou, Kalliopi (55977537700) ;Alexandraki, Krystallenia I (6505978901) ;Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra (24437289200) ;Loli, Paola (6701716475) ;Yener, Serkan (15046152200) ;Langton, Katharina (57194203066) ;Spyroglou, Ariadni (35847802600) ;Kocjan, Tomaz (35588965100) ;Zacharieva, Sabina (7004720701) ;Valdés, Nuria (6508041072) ;Ambroziak, Urszula (16548837700) ;Suzuki, Mari (57211056111) ;Detomas, Mario (57204433745) ;Puglisi, Soraya (55936036500) ;Tucci, Lorenzo (57215022366) ;Delivanis, Danae Anastasia (36782156500) ;Margaritopoulos, Dimitris (37110858700) ;Dusek, Tina (6602245438) ;Maggio, Roberta (36884945600) ;Scaroni, Carla (6701619296) ;Concistrè, Antonio (56168453500) ;Ronchi, Cristina Lucia (7005205446) ;Altieri, Barbara (56039573000) ;Mosconi, Cristina (54926012300) ;Diamantopoulos, Aristidis (57221595362) ;Iñiguez-Ariza, Nicole Marie (56786386900) ;Vicennati, Valentina (6701533573) ;Pia, Anna (6602780019) ;Kroiss, Matthias (24481552400) ;Kaltsas, Gregory (7004156208) ;Chrisoulidou, Alexandra (6602940463) ;Marina, Ljiljana V (36523361900) ;Morelli, Valentina (14037555000) ;Arlt, Wiebke (24366102400) ;Letizia, Claudio (7101924518) ;Boscaro, Marco (7004891637) ;Stigliano, Antonio (57190092238) ;Kastelan, Darko (57203859133) ;Tsagarakis, Stylianos (34969688500) ;Athimulam, Shobana (16743760500) ;Pagotto, Uberto (7004266489) ;Maeder, Uwe (26635434600) ;Falhammar, Henrik (15759450100) ;Newell-Price, John (20935558600) ;Terzolo, Massimo (7006870178)Fassnacht, Martin (6603031564)Background: The association between cortisol secretion and mortality in patients with adrenal incidentalomas is controversial. We aimed to assess all-cause mortality, prevalence of comorbidities, and occurrence of cardiovascular events in uniformly stratified patients with adrenal incidentalomas and cortisol autonomy (defined as non-suppressible serum cortisol on dexamethasone suppression testing). Methods: We conducted an international, retrospective, cohort study (NAPACA Outcome) at 30 centres in 16 countries. Eligible patients were aged 18 years or older with an adrenal incidentaloma (diameter ≥1 cm) detected between Jan 1, 1996, and Dec 31, 2015, and availability of a 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test result from the time of the initial diagnosis. Patients with clinically apparent hormone excess, active malignancy, or follow-up of less than 36 months were excluded. Patients were stratified according to the 0800–0900 h serum cortisol values after an overnight 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test; less than 50 nmol/L was classed as non-functioning adenoma, 50–138 nmol/L as possible autonomous cortisol secretion, and greater than 138 nmol/L as autonomous cortisol secretion. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality. Secondary endpoints were the prevalence of cardiometabolic comorbidities, cardiovascular events, and cause-specific mortality. The primary and secondary endpoints were assessed in all study participants. Findings: Of 4374 potentially eligible patients, 3656 (2089 [57·1%] with non-functioning adenoma, 1320 [36·1%] with possible autonomous cortisol secretion, and 247 [6·8%] with autonomous cortisol secretion) were included in the study cohort for mortality analysis (2350 [64·3%] women and 1306 [35·7%] men; median age 61 years [IQR 53–68]; median follow-up 7·0 years [IQR 4·7–10·2]). During follow-up, 352 (9·6%) patients died. All-cause mortality (adjusted for age, sex, comorbidities, and previous cardiovascular events) was significantly increased in patients with possible autonomous cortisol secretion (HR 1·52, 95% CI 1·19–1·94) and autonomous cortisol secretion (1·77, 1·20–2·62) compared with patients with non-functioning adenoma. In women younger than 65 years, autonomous cortisol secretion was associated with higher all-cause mortality than non-functioning adenoma (HR 4·39, 95% CI 1·93–9·96), although this was not observed in men. Cardiometabolic comorbidities were significantly less frequent with non-functioning adenoma than with possible autonomous cortisol secretion and autonomous cortisol secretion (hypertension occurred in 1186 [58·6%] of 2024 patients with non-functioning adenoma, 944 [74·0%] of 1275 with possible autonomous cortisol secretion, and 179 [75·2%] of 238 with autonomous cortisol secretion; dyslipidaemia occurred in 724 [36·2%] of 1999 patients, 547 [43·8%] of 1250, and 123 [51·9%] of 237; and any diabetes occurred in 365 [18·2%] of 2002, 288 [23·0%] of 1250, and 62 [26·7%] of 232; all p values <0·001). Interpretation: Cortisol autonomy is associated with increased all-cause mortality, particularly in women younger than 65 years. However, until results from randomised interventional trials are available, a conservative therapeutic approach seems to be justified in most patients with adrenal incidentaloma. Funding: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, Università di Torino. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Age-dependent and sex-dependent disparity in mortality in patients with adrenal incidentalomas and autonomous cortisol secretion: an international, retrospective, cohort study(2022) ;Deutschbein, Timo (6506626557) ;Reimondo, Giuseppe (6701516556) ;Di Dalmazi, Guido (35740075100) ;Bancos, Irina (26648031900) ;Patrova, Jekaterina (57190412594) ;Vassiliadi, Dimitra Argyro (24923678900) ;Nekić, Anja Barač (57660092100) ;Debono, Miguel (15925215900) ;Lardo, Pina (57193359349) ;Ceccato, Filippo (26031227200) ;Petramala, Luigi (57203239880) ;Prete, Alessandro (55763975300) ;Chiodini, Iacopo (6603956822) ;Ivović, Miomira (6507747450) ;Pazaitou-Panayiotou, Kalliopi (55977537700) ;Alexandraki, Krystallenia I (6505978901) ;Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra (24437289200) ;Loli, Paola (6701716475) ;Yener, Serkan (15046152200) ;Langton, Katharina (57194203066) ;Spyroglou, Ariadni (35847802600) ;Kocjan, Tomaz (35588965100) ;Zacharieva, Sabina (7004720701) ;Valdés, Nuria (6508041072) ;Ambroziak, Urszula (16548837700) ;Suzuki, Mari (57211056111) ;Detomas, Mario (57204433745) ;Puglisi, Soraya (55936036500) ;Tucci, Lorenzo (57215022366) ;Delivanis, Danae Anastasia (36782156500) ;Margaritopoulos, Dimitris (37110858700) ;Dusek, Tina (6602245438) ;Maggio, Roberta (36884945600) ;Scaroni, Carla (6701619296) ;Concistrè, Antonio (56168453500) ;Ronchi, Cristina Lucia (7005205446) ;Altieri, Barbara (56039573000) ;Mosconi, Cristina (54926012300) ;Diamantopoulos, Aristidis (57221595362) ;Iñiguez-Ariza, Nicole Marie (56786386900) ;Vicennati, Valentina (6701533573) ;Pia, Anna (6602780019) ;Kroiss, Matthias (24481552400) ;Kaltsas, Gregory (7004156208) ;Chrisoulidou, Alexandra (6602940463) ;Marina, Ljiljana V (36523361900) ;Morelli, Valentina (14037555000) ;Arlt, Wiebke (24366102400) ;Letizia, Claudio (7101924518) ;Boscaro, Marco (7004891637) ;Stigliano, Antonio (57190092238) ;Kastelan, Darko (57203859133) ;Tsagarakis, Stylianos (34969688500) ;Athimulam, Shobana (16743760500) ;Pagotto, Uberto (7004266489) ;Maeder, Uwe (26635434600) ;Falhammar, Henrik (15759450100) ;Newell-Price, John (20935558600) ;Terzolo, Massimo (7006870178)Fassnacht, Martin (6603031564)Background: The association between cortisol secretion and mortality in patients with adrenal incidentalomas is controversial. We aimed to assess all-cause mortality, prevalence of comorbidities, and occurrence of cardiovascular events in uniformly stratified patients with adrenal incidentalomas and cortisol autonomy (defined as non-suppressible serum cortisol on dexamethasone suppression testing). Methods: We conducted an international, retrospective, cohort study (NAPACA Outcome) at 30 centres in 16 countries. Eligible patients were aged 18 years or older with an adrenal incidentaloma (diameter ≥1 cm) detected between Jan 1, 1996, and Dec 31, 2015, and availability of a 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test result from the time of the initial diagnosis. Patients with clinically apparent hormone excess, active malignancy, or follow-up of less than 36 months were excluded. Patients were stratified according to the 0800–0900 h serum cortisol values after an overnight 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test; less than 50 nmol/L was classed as non-functioning adenoma, 50–138 nmol/L as possible autonomous cortisol secretion, and greater than 138 nmol/L as autonomous cortisol secretion. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality. Secondary endpoints were the prevalence of cardiometabolic comorbidities, cardiovascular events, and cause-specific mortality. The primary and secondary endpoints were assessed in all study participants. Findings: Of 4374 potentially eligible patients, 3656 (2089 [57·1%] with non-functioning adenoma, 1320 [36·1%] with possible autonomous cortisol secretion, and 247 [6·8%] with autonomous cortisol secretion) were included in the study cohort for mortality analysis (2350 [64·3%] women and 1306 [35·7%] men; median age 61 years [IQR 53–68]; median follow-up 7·0 years [IQR 4·7–10·2]). During follow-up, 352 (9·6%) patients died. All-cause mortality (adjusted for age, sex, comorbidities, and previous cardiovascular events) was significantly increased in patients with possible autonomous cortisol secretion (HR 1·52, 95% CI 1·19–1·94) and autonomous cortisol secretion (1·77, 1·20–2·62) compared with patients with non-functioning adenoma. In women younger than 65 years, autonomous cortisol secretion was associated with higher all-cause mortality than non-functioning adenoma (HR 4·39, 95% CI 1·93–9·96), although this was not observed in men. Cardiometabolic comorbidities were significantly less frequent with non-functioning adenoma than with possible autonomous cortisol secretion and autonomous cortisol secretion (hypertension occurred in 1186 [58·6%] of 2024 patients with non-functioning adenoma, 944 [74·0%] of 1275 with possible autonomous cortisol secretion, and 179 [75·2%] of 238 with autonomous cortisol secretion; dyslipidaemia occurred in 724 [36·2%] of 1999 patients, 547 [43·8%] of 1250, and 123 [51·9%] of 237; and any diabetes occurred in 365 [18·2%] of 2002, 288 [23·0%] of 1250, and 62 [26·7%] of 232; all p values <0·001). Interpretation: Cortisol autonomy is associated with increased all-cause mortality, particularly in women younger than 65 years. However, until results from randomised interventional trials are available, a conservative therapeutic approach seems to be justified in most patients with adrenal incidentaloma. Funding: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, Università di Torino. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
