Abstract

We aimed to evaluate the prevalence of armadillo repeat-containing 5 (ARMC5) genetic defects in our cohort of bilateral adrenal incidentaloma (BAI) patients and to evaluate the possible existence of genotype-phenotype correlations. Cross-sectional study. Tertiary care center. 72 BAI patients. The following data have been collected: morning adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) concentrations; cortisol levels after 1 mg overnight dexamethasone suppression test (F-1mgDST); urinary free cortisol (UFC) levels; diameter of the adrenal masses; and the association with overweight/obesity, arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, cardiovascular events, unrelated neoplasia, osteoporosis, thyroid nodular disease, and primary hyperparathyroidism. A search for ARMC5 germline and somatic pathogenic variants was performed in all patients and in the adrenal tissue of patients operated on, respectively. The prevalence of germline ARMC5 pathogenic variants among patients with mild autonomous cortisol secretion (MACS+, defined as F-1mgDST > 1.8 µg/dL) was 18.8%. No germline pathogenic variants were detected in patients without MACS. Moreover, somatic ARMC5 pathogenic variants were also found in the adrenal tissue of six patients without germline ARMC5 variants. The F-1mgDST levels >5 µg/dL predicted with a poor sensitivity but a 90.5% specificity in identifying the presence of ARMC5 germline pathogenic variants. We did not find any clinical parameter predictive of the ARMC5 mutation presence. In MACS+ BAI patients, germline ARMC5 gene pathogenic variants are frequent. Further studies are needed to elucidate the pathophysiological role of somatic ARMC5 pathogenic variants on adrenal tumor development in otherwise wild-type (WT) patients.

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