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Endocrine Sciences Research Group, Faculty of Medicine and School of Biological Sciences (A.W., D.W.R.), University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom; Diabetes and Endocrinology (A.T.), Hope Hospital, Salford M6 8HD, United Kingdom; Department of Endocrinology (P.A., J.S.B.), Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen, Scotland AB25 2ZN; and Department of Biomedical Sciences (A.J.T.), University of Bradford, Bradford BD71DP, United Kingdom
Address correspondence and requests for reprints to: A. White, Endocrine Sciences Research Group, Faculty of Medicine and School of Biological Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom. E-mail: Awhite{at}man.ac.uk
Adrenal phaeochromocytoma rarely causes ectopic ACTH syndrome. We describe a 44-yr-old hypertensive woman who was Cushingoid and markedly pigmented. Laboratory studies indicated severe hypokalaemia, abnormal liver function tests, and random serum cortisols greater than 1660 nmol/L. Urinary catecholamines were markedly increased. An abdominal computed tomography scan showed a 4-cm left adrenal mass and an hypertrophied right adrenal.
ACTH levels were elevated at 200 pmol/L, but ACTH precursors, which cross-react in the ACTH assay, were more highly elevated at 1625 pmol/L. The tumor cells cultured in vitro also secreted ACTH precursors, whereas ACTH levels were undetectable.
Because the patient was highly pigmented, we measured circulating
concentrations of
-MSH, which were undetectable and certainly
insufficient to stimulate melanogenesis, suggesting that
tumorderived ACTH precursors or ACTH were responsible for the
pigmentation. A laparoscopic adrenalectomy resulted in remission of the
Cushings syndrome and dramatic reduction in the pigmentation.
Before operation, treatment of the patient with metyrapone and replacement dexamethasone decreased cortisol from more than 1660 to less than 20 nmol/L. Surprisingly, this resulted in a decrease in ACTH precursors to 100 pmol/L and ACTH to 9.0 pmol/L. In vitro treatment of the tumor cells with dexamethasone for 24 or 40 h increased ACTH precursor secretion.
In summary, this phaeochromocytoma causing Cushings syndrome secreted primarily ACTH precursors, which seemed to cause the marked pigmentation. In vivo and in vitro evidence suggests that glucocorticoids induced ACTH precursor secretion.
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