Abstract

Current guidelines specify controversial areas in adrenocortical carcinomas (ACC), such as optimal follow-up time after remission and identification of prognostic markers. We aim to address these topics by analyzing four reference centers in our country. Cross-sectional multicentric study of 69 patients (mean age: 51.7 ± 16.7 years-old; women, 72.5%). Kaplan-Meier survival curves and Cox regression analysis were used to calculate overall survival and its predictors. Thirty-eight individuals (55.0%) had hormonal autonomous production, and 40.6% of the patients presented with metastasis. Surgery was performed in 84.1% of them. Most of these patients (72.4%) were then assigned to adjuvant therapy, while 27.6% were actively surveilled. Among patients undergoing surgery, those who achieved transient remission presented a longer survival time (66 months) than those who never reached the disease-free status (21 months) (p = 0.021). One patient presented with recurrence more than 7 years after complete tumor resection. The lowest overall survival was observed in patients (n = 11) assigned to palliative care since diagnosis (9 months). Tumor stage was identified as the only independent predictor of survival in our cohort (p = 0.006). Five-year survival was 67% for tumors confined to the adrenal space (stage I/II), 56% for locally advanced disease (stage III), and 0% for metastatic disease (stage IV). This study reinforces the dismal prognosis of ACC, the need for long-term follow-up, and tumor stage as the most important survival predictor. Reviewing medical records in such rare conditions is an opportunity to identify insufficiencies and to improve medical care.

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