Abstract

BackgroundThe clinical course of advanced adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is heterogeneous. Our study aimed primarily to refine and make headway in the prognostic stratification of advanced ACC. Patients and methodsPatients with advanced ENSAT ACC (stage III or stage IV) at diagnosis registered between 2000 and 2009 in the ENSAT database were enrolled. The primary end point was overall survival (OS). Parameters of potential prognostic relevance were selected. Univariate and multivariate analyses were carried out: model 1 ‘before surgery’; model 2 ‘post-surgery’. ResultsFour hundred and forty-four patients with advanced ENSAT ACC (stage III: 210; stage IV: 234) were analyzed. After a median follow-up of 55.2 months, the median OS was 24 months. A modified ENSAT (mENSAT) classification was validated: stage III (invasion of surrounding tissues/organs or the vena renalis/cava) and stage IVa, IVb, IVc (2, 3 or >3 metastatic organs, including N, respectively). Two- or 5-year OS was 73%, 46%, 26% and 15% or 50%, 15%, 14% and 2% for stages III, IVa, IVb and IVc, respectively. In the multivariate analysis, mENSAT stages (stages IVa, IVb, or IVc, respectively) were significantly correlated with OS (P < 0.0001), as well as additional parameters: age ≥50 years (P < 0.0001), tumor- or hormone-related symptoms (P = 0.01 and 0.03, respectively) in model 1 but also the R status (P = 0.001) and Grade (Weiss >6 and/or Ki67 ≥20%, P = 0.06) in model 2. ConclusionThe mENSAT classification and GRAS parameters (Grade, R status, Age and Symptoms) were found to best stratify the prognosis of patients with advanced ACC.

Highlights

  • The clinical course of advanced adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is heterogeneous

  • In the modified ENSAT (mENSAT) classification, stage III, involved organs (IVa), IVb and IVc were significantly associated with overall survival (OS)

  • Five-year OS of mENSAT stage IVa was 15% but ranged from 0% to 55% when age and functional symptoms were unfavorable or favorable in model 1 (Figure 2B), respectively, and ranged from 16% to 46% when tumor grading and the R status were unfavorable or favorable in model 2 (Figure 3B). This collaborative study of the ENSAT network allowed us to refine the prognostic classification in a large and typical group of patients with advanced ACC defined as stage III or synchronous stage IV disease [3, 5, 12]

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Summary

University of Birmingham

Libe', Rossella; Ronchi, Cristina; Borget, I; Zaggia, B; Kroiss, Matthias; Kerkhofs, T; Bertherat, Jerome; Volante, Marco; Quinkler, Markus; Chabre, Olivier; Bala, Margarita; Tabarin, Antoine; Beuschlein, Felix; Vezzosi, D; Deutschbein, Timo; Borson-Chazot, F; Hermsen, I; Stell, A; Fottner, C; Leboulleux, S. Citation for published version (Harvard): Libe', R, Ronchi, C, Borget, I, Zaggia, B, Kroiss, M, Kerkhofs, T, Bertherat, J, Volante, M, Quinkler, M, Chabre, O, Bala, M, Tabarin, A, Beuschlein, F, Vezzosi, D, Deutschbein, T, Borson-Chazot, F, Hermsen, I, Stell, A, Fottner, C, Leboulleux, S, Hahner, S, Mannelli, M, Berruti, A, Haak, H, Terzolo, M, Fassnacht, M & Baudin, E 2015, 'Prognostic factors in stage III-IV adrenocortical carcinomas (ACC): an European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumor (ENSAT) study', Annals of Oncology, vol 26, no.

Annals of Oncology
Background
Death Y N
Tumor grade
Findings
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