Abstract
To examine the impact of recent advances in diagnostic technology on the spectrum of clinical and biochemical features of patients presenting with a new diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma. A retrospective review of the clinical and biochemical features of patients diagnosed by our laboratory as having phaeochromocytoma within a 27-month period up to December, 1990. Noradrenaline, adrenaline and dihydroxyphenylglycol were assayed in 24-hour urine specimens (19 patients) or plasma (1 anuric patient) by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. A tertiary level chemical pathology department. Twenty patients with a new diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma. The classic, episodic adrenergic symptoms traditionally associated with phaeochromocytoma were absent in 9 of the 20 patients (45%). "Atypical" phaeochromocytoma presented as a mass on computed tomography imaging (6 patients, 30%), "phaeochromocytoma crisis" (4 patients, 20%) or family screening (1 patient, 5%). Excessive adrenaline production was found in 11 patients (55%) and six (30%) had predominantly adrenaline-secreting tumours. The urinary noradrenaline:dihydroxyphenylglycol ratio was raised in all nine patients with predominantly noradrenaline-secreting tumours but was not raised in nine out of ten patients with adrenaline-secreting phaeochromocytoma. Adrenaline excretion was significantly correlated with tumour size (r = 0.8; P less than 0.05). Advances in diagnostic technology, particularly specific adrenaline assays and computed tomography, have made possible the early diagnosis of patients with phaeochromocytoma presenting in ways previously thought to be uncommon. All patients with adrenal masses noted incidentally on CT scan should be investigated for phaeochromocytoma. Adrenaline-secreting tumours are common and both noradrenaline and adrenaline should be assayed in all patients investigated for phaeochromocytoma.
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