作者
Marta Araujo‐Castro,Cristina Álvarez-Escolá,A. Casterás,Alberto Carmona‐Bayonas,María‐Dolores Chiara,Felicia A. Hanzu,Jorge Hernando,J.L. Vercher-Conejero,Macarena Rodríguez‐Fraile,V. Gómez Dos Santos,Paula Jiménez Fonseca,Alexandra Giraldo,Nuria Valdés,Óscar Vidal,María Isabel del Olmo-García,Jaume Capdevila
摘要
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare endocrine malignancy with an estimated incidence of 0.7–2 cases per million/year. The rarity of this disease, coupled with limited preclinical models and clinical trials, has hindered progress, resulting in poor outcomes, with a 5-year survival rate of approximately 35%. Currently, the only available curative treatment is complete surgical resection of the adrenal tumor. For unresectable or metastatic ACC, the current standard therapeutic modalities are mitotane, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and locoregional treatments; however, these are non-curative. Mitotane has an adrenolytic and anti-steroidogenic effect, and it is used in the adjuvant setting for high-risk patients, as systemic therapy for metastatic disease, and/or to control hormonal secretion. While key pathways in ACC pathogenesis have been identified as potential therapeutic targets, results with targeted therapies remain modest, showing that there is a clinical unmet need for novel treatments or new combinations of exiting drugs. Effective management requires a multidisciplinary team of experts to optimize outcomes for patients. This article presents a multidisciplinary consensus on the diagnosis, management, prognosis, and follow-up of patients with ACC, as well as the approach to two special contexts, ACC in pregnant women and hormone-producing ACC. The consensus was coordinated by the Spanish Society of Endocrinology and Nutrition (SEEN) and the Spanish Group of Neuroendocrine and Endocrine Tumors (GETNE), with contribution from experts from related societies including the Spanish Association of Surgeons (AEC), Spanish Society of Urology (AEU), Anatomic Pathology, Nuclear Medicine (SEMNIM), Medical Oncology (SEOM), and Radiotherapeutic Oncology (SEOR).