Phaeochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) are catecholamine secreting neuroendocrine tumours that predispose to haemodynamic instability. Currently, surgery is the only available curative treatment, but carries potential risks including hypertensive and hypotensive crises, cardiac arrhythmias, myocardial infarction and stroke, due to tumoral release of catecholamines during anaesthetic induction and tumour manipulation. The mortality associated with surgical resection of PPGL has significantly improved from 20-45% in the early 20th century (Apgar & Papper, AMA Archives of Surgery, 1951, 62, 634) to 0-2·9% in the early 21st century (Kinney et al. Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia, 2002, 16, 359), largely due to availability of effective pharmacological agents and advances in surgical and anaesthetic practice. However, surgical resection of PPGL still poses significant clinical management challenges. Preoperatively, alpha-adrenoceptor blockade is the mainstay of management, although various pharmacological strategies have been proposed, based largely on reports derived from retrospective data sets. To date, no consensus has been reached regarding the 'ideal' preoperative strategy due, in part, to a paucity of data from high-quality evidence-based studies comparing different treatment regimens. Here, based on the available literature, we address the Clinical Question: Is there an optimal preoperative management strategy for PPGL?
I-Metaiodobenzylguanidine (123 I-MIBG) scintigraphy scanning is commonly used in the imaging of phaeochromocytoma (and paraganglioma) to confirm the site of disease and whether any spread has occurred. However, 123 I-MIBG imaging is negative in 15% of cases of benign phaeochromocytoma and around 50% of cases of malignant phaeochromocytoma. In recent years, positron emission tomography (PET) scanning using various different radiotracers has been shown to be a good alternative or supplementary investigation in phaeochromocytoma. We present the cases of four patients with symptoms and signs suggestive of phaeochromocytoma, but who had negative 123 I-MIBG scans, and illustrate the usefulness of 18-fluoro-dihydroxyphenylalanine PET scanning in their assessment. In one of the patients, we illustrate how fluorodeoxyglucose PET scanning can provide useful information about the extent of malignant disease. These illustrative cases lend further support for the use of PET scanning in the assessment of phaeochromocytoma and suggest that it may have a particularly important role in the investigation of patients in whom 123 I-MIBG scanning is negative.European Journal of Endocrinology 157 533-537
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