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Original Studies |
Developmental Endocrinology Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (D.J.T., G.P.C., L.K.N.); Departments of Radiology (C.C., J.L.D., J.C.) and Nursing (N.M.), Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Recent case reports and small series suggest that imaging after injection of 111In-pentetreotide or other radioactive-labeled analogs of somatostatin can identify ectopic ACTH-producing tumors, particularly those more than 2 cm in diameter (6, 7, 8, 9, 10). Consequently, a major review recommended octreotide scintigraphy as the primary test, as its sensitivity may be greater than CT or MRI (11).
Octreotide scintigraphy is based on the finding that carcinoid tumors commonly express somatostatin receptors (12, 13). Because the usefulness of octreotide imaging has rarely been evaluated for imaging small (<2 cm) tumors or occult masses not visualized by conventional radiography, we retrospectively analyzed our experience with 18 consecutive patients with ectopic ACTH secreting tumors.
| Subjects and Methods |
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A retrospective case review identified 18 consecutive patients
(9 male, 9 female; ages 2079 yr) with ectopic ACTH secretion who had
had at least one octreotide scintigram between 19941998 at the
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center. Patients had
ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism according to standard criteria: urine
free cortisol more than 300 nmol/day; normal 70300 nmol/day;
0800 h ACTH more than 3 pmol/L, normal 16 pmol/L. CRH
stimulation and overnight 8 mg dexamethasone suppression tests were
consistent with ectopic ACTH secretion in all patients (14, 15). Based
on published criteria, inferior petrosal sinus sampling (IPSS) results
were diagnostic of a nonpituitary source of ACTH in 15 patients (16).
IPSS was not performed in 3 patients (nos. 10, 13, and 17; Table 1![]()
), in whom the diagnosis of ectopic
Cushings syndrome was based on historical and/or biochemical
criteria. Patient 10 presented with recurrent Cushings syndrome 11 yr
after resection of an ACTH-containing bronchial carcinoid. Patient 13
was diagnosed with ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism during follow-up for
sporadic (non-MEN I) metastatic gastrinoma. Patient 17 was severely
obese (450 lb), so that neither IPSS nor imaging studies could be
performed on initial evaluation. An ACTH-staining bronchial carcinoid
was ultimately excised from this patient after adrenalectomy, weight
loss, and imaging.
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Clinical features included weight gain (100%) and other features of Cushings syndrome. Hypertension was present in 11 patients (61%) and hypokalemia in 5 (28%). Infections affected 4 patients (22%) and included cellulitis of the lower extremities, pneumocystis pneumonia, oral candidiasis, urinary tract infections, and pneumonia (unknown organism). Urine-free cortisol levels (RIA) were markedly elevated in nonadrenalectomized cases [mean 7500 nmol/day, range 41028,100 nmol/day; normal range 70300 nmol/day (or 2,717, range 15010,185 ug/day; normal range 24108 ug/day)]. Random plasma ACTH levels were very high [mean 48, normal range 5340 pmol/L; normal range 16 pmol/L (or mean 218, range 22 to 1,557 pg/mL, normal range 626 pg/mL)].
Imaging
Patients were imaged 4 and 24 h after injection with
6 mCi 111In-pentetreotide (Octreoscan) using
Trionix (Twinburg, OH) or ADAC (Milipitas, CA) dual- or
triple-headed
cameras with medium-energy parallel hole collimators
centered over both 111Indium photon peaks (173 and 247 KeV)
with 20% windows. At 4 h, whole body, planar spot, and SPECT
images were obtained, and at 24 h, spot and SPECT images were
repeated. For SPECT, 120 sequential, 30-sec images using dual headed
cameras, or 120 sequential, 40-sec images using triple headed cameras
were obtained. The images were reconstructed with the manufacturers
software by using a standard filtered back projection algorithm.
Hamming (Trionix) or Hanning (ADAC) filters were used. Scintigraphy was
regarded as abnormal if nonphysiological uptake was observed at both 4
and 24 h. Scintigrams were initially interpreted by one of three
Nuclear Medicine physicians, without knowledge of the CT or MRI
results. Two observers (C.C.C. and J.A.C.) reviewed the results, one
who had knowledge of the patients radiology results and subsequent
clinical course, and one who did not. The octreotide scintigraphy
interpretation was altered retrospectively in only one case (5), as
shown in Table 1
. True and false positivity and negativity were defined
on the basis of biopsy or unequivocal anatomical imaging (CT/MRI).
CT was performed with a Hi Speed Advantage Scanner (GE Medical Systems, Milwaukee, WI) scanner. Section thickness was 5 mm through the chest and upper abdomen to the adrenals and 10 mm through the lower abdomen and pelvis. All sections were contiguous. A contrast agent was administered orally. Most studies were performed during a bolus (130 mL injected at 2 mL/sec) of nonionic water-soluble contrast, given at the radiologists discretion.
MRI was obtained with a 0.5-T scanner (Picker, Highland Heights, OH). T1-weighted spin-echo (SE) imaging was performed with a repetition time (TR) of 300 msec, echo time (TE) of 10 msec (TR/TE = 300/10), and eight excitations. T2-weighted SE imaging was performed with TR/TE of 2000/80 and two excitations. Short inversion time inversion-recovery (STIR) imaging was performed with a TR of 1,600 msec, TE of 30 msec, inversion time of 100 msec, and four excitations. Images were obtained in the coronal and axial planes.
CT and MRI scan results were interpreted by a single author (J.L.D.). On some occasions interpretation of the CT or MRI scans was done with knowledge of the other scan, hence these modalities are considered together and compared with octreotide scintigraphy. We defined an "abnormal" CT or MR study as one where the imaging results were sufficiently convincing to prompt further action, such as venous sampling, biopsy, or surgical exploration. In one patient (5), a tumor found on imaging was thought to be definite, but no action was deemed necessary on clinical grounds. Where tumors were not evident on CT or MRI, they were considered "occult."
| Results |
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Initial imaging
Initial imaging with CT and/or MRI revealed evidence of a neuroendocrine tumor in seven patients (3, 4, 7, 10, 13, 15, 17). This led to surgical resection of an ACTH-staining neuroendocrine tumor and cure of hypercortisolism in five cases (3, 4, 7, 15, 17). The tumors ranged in size from 1.53.0 cm. Surgery was not indicated in two patients with metastatic disease (10, 13).
In six of the seven patients with abnormal CT and/or MRI, concurrent octreotide scintigraphy was abnormal (3, 7, 10, 13, 15, 17). Case 4 had positive CT and MRI with false negative octreotide scintigraphy. The lower neck lesion of case 15 was detected on CT chest images.
False positive octreotide scintigraphy corresponded to a liver lesion on CT, refuted by negative hepatic venous sampling for ACTH (5) and an area of inflammatory consolidation on MRI (11). Three patients with negative (9, 16) or false positive initial octreotide imaging (11) did not undergo follow-up.
Follow-up imaging
The remaining eight patients with initially occult tumors (1, 2, 6, 8, 12, 14, 18) were re-evaluated, generally at 6-month intervals. In two of these cases follow-up CT and/or MRI localized a biopsy-proven ACTH source (12, 14). Unbiopsied, but highly likely CT/MRI tumor detection was also noted in another patient (2) with recurrent thoracic tumor after lobectomy for a bronchial carcinoid. Follow-up octreotide scintigraphy after an initial normal scan did not localize an ACTH-secreting tumor in any patient.
The follow-up period was 742 months in these patients. Discontinued follow-up related to disseminated incurable disease (13, 14) or failure to return for unknown reasons (5, 10).
Outcome of management
Of the 15 patients with new onset Cushings syndrome, tumor was localized in 8. Cure was obtained by removal of an ACTH source in 3 patients (3, 7, 15). One patient (4) had an ACTH-positive pancreatic carcinoid excised but did not return for biochemical follow-up. The remaining 4 patients had an ACTH-secreting tumor removed, but they had either already been adrenalectomized (12, 17) or were not cured because of metastases (13, 14). Of the 3 patients with recurrent Cushings syndrome (2, 5, 10), tumor was localized with CT and MRI in 2 (2, 10) and with octreotide scintigraphy in 1 patient (10).
Patient 13 had skeletal lesions from metastatic gastrinoma detected by octreotide scintigraphy and Tc 99m MDP imaging, which were not detected by CT. Although this did not influence management (chemotherapy), such a finding could alter management of a patient where surgery was contemplated. In two patients (10, 14), metastatic disease only, rather than primary tumor, was detected by imaging.
Reflecting the difficulty in achieving either initial localization or cure of hypercortisolism, 7 of the 18 cases were ultimately treated with bilateral adrenalectomy. Other noncured patients were treated with inhibitors of adrenal steroidogenesis.
Final diagnoses
Final diagnoses included bronchial carcinoid (six patients, 33%), bronchial carcinoid tumorlets (12) (reported elsewhere; 17), metastatic gastrinoma (13), pancreatic carcinoid (4), lymphatic spread of a previously resected bronchial carcinoid (5), metastatic neuroendocrine tumor involving the liver and lung (14), neuroendocrine carcinoma inside the carotid sheath (noncarotid body) (15), and undiagnosed (six patients, 33%).
Comparison of octreotide scintigraphy and conventional imaging
A comparison of the results of octreotide scintigraphy with
CT and MRI scanning is shown in Table 2
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There were 17 abnormal octreotide scintigrams. Ten were true positive
identifying ACTH-secreting tumor, and seven were false positives.
Biopsy confirmed an ACTH-containing tumor identified by nine positive
scans, and MRI showing nodal metastases from previously excised
neuroendocrine tumor confirmed an additional case (10). Octreotide
scintigraphy did not reveal more extensive tumor than CT and/or MRI did
in any patient, except for the skeletal metastatic gastrinoma lesions
(13). Four false positive octreotide scintigrams were associated with
nonendocrine lesions on CT or MRI (radiation fibrosis in three scans
and an inflammatory lesion in one scan). Three false positive
octreotide scintigrams prompted further investigation. The results
included 1), a left upper quadrant lesion, shown to be an accessory
spleen on liver/spleen scan; 2), a hepatic lesion, also seen on CT but
not associated with an elevation of hepatic venous plasma ACTH; and 3),
a lesion in the right upper quadrant not associated with a lesion on
CT, which was not seen on subsequent octreotide scintigraphy.
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| Discussion |
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At initial evaluation, 61% of patients had undetectable ACTH-secreting tumor, representing occult cases. Eventually, with follow-up, tumor was localized in 56% of these patients, although cure by ablation of the ectopic ACTH source was achieved in only 17%. This outcome reflects persistent ACTH secretion from tumor elsewhere (28%) or, in 39% of cases, inability to localize the ACTH source.
Overall performance of the 3 imaging modalities was suboptimal, as 8 of 18 (44%) patients did not have their tumor detected. This highlights the need for better imaging capabilities; the difficulty of localizing ectopic ACTH-secreting tumors is inadequately emphasized in the literature.
Early detection of ectopic ACTH-producing tumors may avoid adrenalectomy and reduce the risk from metastatic neuroendocrine tumor. 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy offered the promise of high sensitivity neuroendocrine tumor detection in these patients. The value of octreotide scintigraphy has been demonstrated in gastrinomas (18, 19). Carcinoid tumors, common sources of ectopic ACTH production, often express somatostatin receptors (12, 13). Apart from CT/MRI imaging, the only other technique that has been evaluated for the detection of ectopic ACTH-secreting tumors is selective venous sampling, which has been of limited value when conventional radiologic imaging is unrevealing (4, 5, 20).
We studied patients with bronchial carcinoid, the commonest cause of ectopic Cushings syndrome, as well as other forms of neuroendocrine tumor arising in the chest or abdomen. However, no known cases of thymic carcinoid, medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, or small cell carcinoma of the lung were included in this study, hence the value of octreotide scintigraphy in these tumors was not assessed. However, ACTH-secreting thymic carcinoids are almost always larger than 2 cm on presentation (4, 21), and the other tumors are also usually in this size range and may be identified by biochemical markers. Thus, unlocalized cases in this series probably represent small bronchial carcinoids.
The recent introduction of octreotide scintigraphy and the relative rarity of ectopic Cushings syndrome limit the relevant literature. Several case reports describe detection of nonoccult ectopic ACTH-secreting tumor with octreotide scintigraphy (7, 8, 9, 10, 22, 23, 24). De Herder and coworkers (24) reported that eight of nine patients with an ectopic ACTH-secreting tumor were detected with 123I-Tyr3-octreotide or 111InDTPA-D-Phe1-octreotide imaging (24). However, only one of these cases was occult, and in that case scintigraphy failed (21). Where details are given, the octreotide imaging technique in those reports appears similar to that used in our patients (19).
Although octreotide scintigraphy did not add significant sensitivity to CT/MRI in this series, it is conceivable that a technique relying on in vivo receptor labeling may add to the specificity of diagnoses made with CT/MRI. This would be analogous to functional information derived from MRI, where certain features on T2 and STIR images help distinguish small central carcinoids from pulmonary vasculature (3). However, the frequency of ACTH-secreting tumors in patients with negative octreotide scintigraphy and positive CT and MRI scans suggests that octreotide imaging cannot be relied on for improving the specificity of anatomical studies.
The relatively poor results of octreotide scintigraphy in vivo are at odds with the in vitro finding of somatostatin receptors in the majority (up to 87%) of carcinoid tumors, the major cause of occult ectopic ACTH-secreting neoplasms (12, 13). We speculate that the imaging technique may be limited by the small size of ectopic ACTH-secreting tumors, the specific somatostatin receptor subtype expressed by the tumors, or the amount of isotope administered, 6 mCi (26, 27). The smallest tumor detected by octreotide scintigraphy in our series was 1.6 cm; the smallest other reported tumor detected was 0.6 cm (9). Only one other tumor of less than 1 cm was detected on octreotide scintigraphy (7); other reported tumor sizes were 1.03.0 cm (10, 25, 28, 29, 30).
In these 18 patients, octreotide scintigraphy did not detect otherwise occult ectopic ACTH-secreting tumors. False positive scintigrams without corroborative CT/MRI evidence of neuroendocrine tumor were generally explainable by nonendocrine processes. Overall, as octreotide scintigraphy did not enhance efforts to localize ACTH-secreting tumors or manage ectopic Cushings syndrome, we do not recommend that CT and MRI be replaced by octreotide scintigraphy.
| Footnotes |
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Received September 22, 1998.
Revised December 11, 1998.
Accepted December 17, 1998.
| References |
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