Abstract

Abstract Disclosure: N. Chandrashekar: None. B. Arafah: None. Introduction: Pheochromocytomas are catecholamine-secreting tumors that are rare but dangerous and occur in <0.2% of patients with hypertension. Case: A 28 year old female with a 10 year history of hypertension and invasive stage 2b cervical cancer s/p chemoradiation presented to the hospital with circulatory shock from Takutsubo cardiomyopathy requiring intubation, vasopressors, CVVH, and ECMO. The endocrinology service was consulted due to a highly vascular, 3.6 cm, ∼23 Hounsfield units right adrenal mass evidenced on CT abdomen done months prior to admission. There were elevations in plasma normetanephrine to 15 nmol/L (ref <0.90 nmol/L), plasma metanephrine to 1.5 nmol/L (ref <0.50 nmol/L), urinary metanephrine to 565 ug/24-hours (ref 36 - 209 ug/24-hr), and urinary normetanephrine to 2580 ug/24-hr (ref 95 - 449 ug/24-hr). With her acute illness and recent use of vasopressors and quetiapine, these labs could not be accurately interpreted, and outpatient follow up was recommended. She was discharged home on metoprolol and hydralazine for hypertension management by her primary team. She was re-admitted to the CICU 2 days later for hypertensive emergency with flash pulmonary edema. With further questioning, she endorsed longstanding hypertension with episodes of headaches, palpitations, and vomiting. Her cancer therapy related menopause caused frequent nighttime hot flashes while inpatient. These episodes precipitated witnessed symptoms of catecholamine release with severe hypertension and palpitations. It was noted during her hospitalization that her symptoms were controlled during the day with frequent escape during the night despite continuous alpha and subsequent beta blockade every 6 hrs. Estrogen therapy would have been beneficial, however given a recent DVT, this was avoided and instead megestrol acetate and venlafaxine were used. With these additions, her adrenergic spells completely resolved. She then underwent a right adrenalectomy and had no significant fluctuations in her BP intraoperatively with complete resolutions of symptoms postoperatively. The pathology revealed a right 2.7 cm pheochromocytoma with no local invasion or distant metastasis. Conclusion: This is a case of pheochromocytoma crisis with cardiogenic shock followed by subsequent hypertensive emergency in the setting of inappropriate beta-blocker use. Confounders like vasopressors (increases catecholamines), intrinsic stress of critical illness (increases catecholamines), and quetiapine use (can increase normetanephrine levels) make it difficult to analyze labs. In these cases, a thorough history and imaging are key to establishing a diagnosis and initiating life-saving treatment. Another unique feature of this case is the control of the patient’s triggering menopausal hot flashes with megace and venlafaxine to preempt adrenergic spells during her admission. Presentation: 6/2/2024

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