Abstract

Abstract Disclosure: J. Saini: None. R. Nathani: None. C. Zhang: None. M. Suresh: None. K. Thangamuthu: None. S. Singh: None. V. Fell: None. E.J. Atkinson: None. S. Achenbach: None. N.H. Stricker: None. I. Bancos: None. Background: Patients with mild autonomous cortisol secretion (MACS) have impaired cognition compared to patients with non-functioning adrenal adenomas. However, the impact of adrenalectomy on cognitive function in patients with MACS is unclear. Objective: To determine the impact of adrenalectomy on cognitive function in patients with MACS. Methods: Single-center prospective longitudinal study of adults with MACS. MACS was defined as serum cortisol >1.8 mcg/dL after the 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test (DST) in patients with adrenal adenomas without any overt features of hypercortisolism. Patients underwent cognitive evaluation using the standardized National Institute of Health (NIH) Toolbox Cognition Battery (7 tests of attention, episodic and working memory, language, executive function, cognitive flexibility, and processing speed) prior to adrenalectomy and at follow-up at least 10 months post-surgery. Fully corrected T-scores for age, sex, education, and race were compared using a paired t-test before and after adrenalectomy. A T-score of 50 is average performance (SD of 10). Total cognition is composite of fluid cognition (executive function, episodic memory, cognitive flexibility, working memory and processing speed) and crystallized cognition (language and vocabulary). Results: A total of 27 patients with MACS (median age 59.7 years, IQR 51.4-66.9, 17, 63% women) underwent cognitive evaluation prior to and at a median of 1.5 years (IQR, 1.1- 2.0) after adrenalectomy. Before surgery, median post-DST cortisol was 3.8 mcg/dL (IQR, 2.7-6.4) mcg/dL. Of the 27 patients, 21 (78%) patients developed post-operative adrenal insufficiency with 6 (21%) patients still requiring still requiring glucocorticoid replacement at the time of the last follow-up. At baseline, the mean total composite T-score was 50.7 (9.3), with fluid composite T-score of 49.9 (9.4) and crystallized composite T-score of 51.3 (8.7). Following adrenalectomy, all three composite T-scores improved compared to baseline. The crystallized composite T-score (composed of language and vocabulary) increased by a mean of 3.7 (5.5), P=0.001, the fluid composite T-score (composed of episodic, executive, working memory, cognitive flexibility, and processing speed) increased by a mean of 3.1 (8.3), P=0.068, and the total composite T-score improved by a mean of 3.9 (6.2), P=0.004. Conclusion: We showed that adrenalectomy in patients with MACS is associated with improvement in cognition. However, as test results may improve with practice (i.e., improvement due to taking the test the second time), to determine whether the improvements observed represent a reliable change in cognition, the next step is to evaluate for cognition score changes in referent subjects. Presentation: Friday, June 16, 2023

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