Abstract
Well and poorly differentiated neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) may be associated with an ectopic production of Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH) [1] that leads to a paraneoplastic Cushing Syndrome (CS). This heterogeneous clinical pattern is the result of a hypercortisolism [2] due to an uncontrolled and continuous hyperstimulation of the adrenal cortex, which escapes the negative feedback of the Hypothalamus-Hypophysis axis [3]. Among NENs, ectopic-ACTH secretion (EAS) has been historically associated with small-cell lung cancers (SCLCs), but the improvement of the knowledge and diagnostic techniques led to a broadening of the causes also to NENs with different morphologies and from other sites [4]. According to the previous published data, EAS by gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) NENs occurs in almost 13% of cases. Irrespective of the NENs site of origin and the biology (which means morphology and proliferation index), the CS may represent a life-threatening condition for the patients due the consequences of the mineralocorticoid effect of persistent high levels of cortisol. These patients may experience a plethora of different symptoms which includes diffuse oedema, overweight/obesity of the trunk and striae rubrae, but also severe hypokalemia and hypertension, that represent medical emergencies and tumor fatal consequences even without a progression disease [1]. EAS may initially occur with non-specific clinical manifestations, as psychiatric complaints, recurrent orthopedic issues, sexual and reproductive disfunctions [3] that are not easily related to a tumoral cause and lead the patient presents to many specialists before being referred to an endocrinology / oncology Center. For all these reasons, CS diagnosis is often delayed. In a very small pool of cases [5], EAS may occur in the peculiar category of the adolescents and young adults (AYA) patients, worldwide defined as the cancerpopulation between 15 and 39 years of age [6]. Generally, the cancer diagnosis in AYA population is delayed, on one hand due to the sense of invulnerability and the minimizing of the symptoms of AYA patients and, on the other, the trend of the providers to a low suspicion of cancer in AYA population. Therefore, the features of the AYA category together with the equivocal clinical patterns of CS may lead to a delay of the diagnosis and management of EAS by extra-pituitary NENs [3, 7]. Here we reported the case of a NEN AYA patient with CS by EAS and a review of the literature on this topic in this peculiar population.
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