Abstract
e17114 Background: Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare cancer with an incidence of 0.7 – 2 cases per million persons per year, and generally has a poor prognosis with a 5-year survival rate of 20-25%. In a previous review of 330 patients with ACC, the median overall survival time of patients with Stage IV ACC was 0.9 years. Currently, complete surgical resection is the only curative treatment for ACC. Cases of recurrent or metastatic ACC are infrequently curable by surgery alone and systemic therapies have limited benefit. A previous study has suggested that local interventions to resect liver metastases improve survival. We hypothesize that local therapies increase survival of patients with metastatic ACC and here we describe the characteristics of various types of regional therapies. Methods: We conducted a retrospective chart review of 26 patients with ACC who were seen at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) between 2002 and 2019 and who are currently alive. These patients had multiple interventions that were performed including surgeries, radiofrequency ablations/embolizations/cryoablations and systemic therapies. Results: The group of patients we studied were 92% female and 8% male. The ages ranged from 23 to 77, with an average age of 57. Out of the 26 patients, 11 (42%) patients had liver metastases, 17 (65%) patients had lung metastases, 4 (15%) patients had retroperitoneal recurrence, and 5 (19%) patients had lymph node involvement. All patients with lung, retroperitoneum, liver, and lymph node metastases underwent surgical intervention. In patients with liver metastases, 73% underwent liver-directed therapies and 91% received systemic therapy. In patients with lung metastases, 59% underwent radiofrequency ablation or cryoablation and 94% had systemic therapy. Among the systemic therapies, 15% of patients received zero lines of treatment, 50% of patients received one line, 12% of patients received two lines, 19% of patients received three lines, and 4% of patients received more than three lines of treatment. Conclusions: The analysis of this cohort indicates that multiple local therapies could increase patient survival. ACC metastases are most common in the liver, followed by the lungs. Patients with recurrent/metastatic ACC should be considered for regional therapies such as metastasectomy/ablation in experienced hands which can increase long-term survival in selected patients.
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