A 52-year-old man with hypertension controlled on a single antihypertensive agent presents for a routine CT abdomen for evaluation of flank pain. Imaging reveals a 2.3-cm left adrenal mass with benign imaging characteristics (high lipid content, homogeneous appearance, no contrast washout delay). Laboratory evaluation shows: ACTH-stimulated cortisol 18 mcg/dL (normal), plasma renin activity 1.2 ng/mL/hr (normal), aldosterone 8 ng/dL (normal), and plasma free metanephrines 45 pg/mL (normal). The patient is asymptomatic with no signs of hormonal excess. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?

  1. A)Repeat CT imaging of the adrenal glands in 12 months, then annually for 2 years if stableGABARITO
  2. B)Perform adrenalectomy given the patient's age and to reduce long-term cancer risk
  3. C)Obtain a dedicated adrenal MRI with diffusion-weighted imaging to better characterize the lesion
  4. D)Measure 24-hour urinary free cortisol and DHEA-sulfate to screen for autonomous cortisol secretion
  5. E)Proceed with fine-needle aspiration biopsy under ultrasound guidance to exclude adrenocortical carcinoma

Explicação

This patient has a benign adrenal incidentaloma (2.3 cm, lipid-rich, homogeneous) with negative biochemical screening for all hormone-secreting states (cortisol excess, aldosterone excess, and catecholamine excess). The Endocrine Society guidelines recommend i... Ver explicação completa e trilha adaptativa →

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