Back to Search Start Over

Cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors in patients with subclinical Cushing

Authors :
Antonio Concistrè
Soldini M
Riccardo Russo
Luigi Petramala
Giorgio De Toma
Gino Iannucci
Martina Mezzadri
Giuseppe De Vincentis
Federica Olmati
Claudio Letizia
Source :
Endocrine. 70:150-163
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Adrenal incidentalomas (AI) are discovered after work-up unrelated to adrenal gland diseases; up to 30% of AI show subclinical endogenous cortisol excess (SH), frequently associated to hypertension, obesity, metabolic disorders and increased incidence of cardiovascular events (CVEs). We analysed 628 AI patients divided into two groups: 471 non-functional adrenal adenoma (NFA) and 157 SH. All patients underwent complete examinations, 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, biohumoral parameters and vascular damage markers, such as c-IMT and ankle brachial index. After long-term follow-up, we registered newly onset of CVEs such as myocardial infarction (MI), percutaneous stenting and surgical bypass (PTA/CABG), stroke, overall/cardiovascular mortality. Moreover, SH patients underwent to surgical (SSH) or pharmacological treatment (MSH). SH patients showed higher prevalence of metabolic syndrome, diabetes mellitus, and previous CVEs respect NFA at baseline. After follow-up MSH group showed higher recurrence of major CV events compared with NFA and SSH (RR 2.27 MSH vs NFA for MI; RR 2.30 MSH vs NFA for PTA/CABG; RR 2.41 MSH vs NFA for stroke). In SSH there was a significant reduction of the number of antihypertensive medications needed to reach target blood pressure levels (2.3 ± 1.0 to 1.5 ± 0.4 drugs). None differences were found in SH patients, distinguished in relation to cortisol plasma levels after dexamethasone suppression test (1.8–5 µg/dL, above 5 µg/dL). SH is linked to relevant cardiovascular and metabolic alterations, leading to worsen clinical outcomes. In eligible patients, adrenalectomy is valid and safe option to treat SH, reducing cardiometabolic abnormalities.

Details

ISSN :
15590100 and 1355008X
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Endocrine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0c6ed902d03e98462a9c0f4ced006a0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12020-020-02297-2