Incidentalomas - Surprise Gland Finds
- Adrenal mass >1 cm diameter, discovered serendipitously on imaging for unrelated conditions.
- Prevalence: Found in ~3-7% of abdominal CT scans; frequency ↑ with age.
- Initial imaging assessment: Non-contrast CT is key.
- Size: Lesions >4-6 cm raise suspicion for adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC).
- Attenuation: ≤10 HU (Hounsfield Units) strongly suggests a benign, lipid-rich adenoma.
- If >10 HU, consider contrast-enhanced CT with washout calculation or MRI.

⭐ The majority (around 70-80%) of adrenal incidentalomas are benign, non-functioning cortical adenomas.
Hormonal Workup - Hormone Havoc
- All patients: Screen for pheochromocytoma & (sub)clinical Cushing's.
- Pheochromocytoma:
- Plasma free metanephrines OR 24-hr urinary fractionated metanephrines & catecholamines.
- 📌 Mnemonic: "Pheo Free Met" (Pheochromocytoma = Plasma Free Metanephrines).
- (Sub)clinical Cushing's Syndrome:
- 1mg overnight dexamethasone suppression test (ODST).
- Post-DST serum cortisol > 1.8 $µg/dL$ (or >50 $nmol/L$) is positive.
- Primary Aldosteronism:
- Screen if hypertensive or hypokalemic.
- Plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC) & plasma renin activity (PRA) for ARR.
- PAC > 15 $ng/dL$, PRA < 1 $ng/mL/hr$, ARR > 20-30.
⭐ Subclinical Cushing's syndrome is the most common hormonally active tumor found in adrenal incidentalomas.
Management Strategy - Scalpel or Scope?
- Surgery (Laparoscopic Adrenalectomy preferred):
- All functional tumors (Cushing's, pheochromocytoma, Conn's).
- Size > 4-6 cm.
- Radiological suspicion of malignancy (e.g., >10 HU unenhanced CT, poor washout).
- Significant growth (>1 cm/year) on follow-up.
- Conservative Management (Non-functional, <4cm, benign appearance):
- Repeat hormonal workup & imaging (CT/MRI) at 6-12 months.
- Then annually for 1-2 years, then less frequently if stable.
- Consider surgery if tumor grows significantly or becomes functional.
⭐ Most adrenal incidentalomas (~70%) are benign, non-functioning adenomas; pheochromocytoma must always be ruled out before any intervention, including biopsy.
Key Diagnoses - Nodule Nasties
- Pheochromocytoma:
- Rule out first! "10% tumor" (bilateral, extra-adrenal, malignant, familial, pediatric).
- Symptoms: Paroxysmal hypertension, palpitations, headache, sweating (📌 PHE: Palpitations, Headache, Episodic sweating).
- Biochem: ↑ Plasma metanephrines / 24hr urine metanephrines & VMA.
- Pre-op: α-blockade (e.g., phenoxybenzamine) then β-blockade.
- Adrenocortical Carcinoma (ACC):
- Suspect if >4-6 cm, irregular, heterogeneous, calcifications, high attenuation (>10 HU unenhanced CT), poor contrast washout.
- Often functional (Cushing's, virilization). Surgical resection is key.
- Cushing's Syndrome (Adrenal Adenoma):
- Autonomous cortisol secretion.
- Dx: Dexamethasone suppression test (fails to suppress), ↑ 24hr UFC, ↑ late-night salivary cortisol.
- Primary Aldosteronism (Conn's Syndrome):
- Aldosterone-producing adenoma. Hypertension, hypokalemia.
- Dx: Aldosterone-Renin Ratio (ARR) >20-30, saline infusion test confirmation.
- Metastasis:
- Common from lung, breast, kidney, melanoma. Often bilateral; history of primary cancer.
⭐ For pheochromocytoma, always initiate alpha-blockade before beta-blockade to prevent unopposed alpha-adrenergic stimulation leading to a hypertensive crisis.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Adrenal incidentalomas: Masses >1 cm found serendipitously; most are non-functional benign adenomas.
- Prevalence ↑ with age; initial workup includes CT/MRI and hormonal screening.
- Screen for pheochromocytoma (metanephrines), Cushing's (dexamethasone suppression), and Conn's (aldosterone/renin).
- Surgery for functional tumors, malignancy suspicion (size >4-6 cm, suspicious imaging), or growth.
- Non-functional tumors <4 cm without suspicious features are typically observed with serial imaging.
- Always resect pheochromocytomas after alpha and beta blockade to prevent hypertensive crisis.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app