Adrenocortical cancer: A molecularly complex disease where surgery matters

Eden C. Payabyab, Sanjeeve Balasubramaniam, Maureen Edgerly, Margarita Velarde, Maria J. Merino, Aradhana M. Venkatesan, Harshraj Leuva, Thomas Litman, Susan E Bates, Tito Fojo*

*Corresponding author for this work
    9 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The development of new therapies has lagged behind for rare cancers without defined therapeutic targets. Adrenocortical cancer is no exception. Mitotane, an older agent considered "adrenolytic," is used both to control symptoms in advanced disease and as adjuvant therapy after surgical resection. Molecular characterization of adrenocortical cancer has deepened our understanding of this genetically complex disease while identifying subgroups whose importance remains to be determined. Unfortunately, such studies have yet to demonstrate a therapeutic target for drug development, and to date, no targeted therapy has achieved meaningful outcomes. Consequently, first-line therapy for metastatic disease remains a combination regimen of etoposide, doxorubicin, and cisplatinum established in a randomized clinical trial. In addition to evaluating recent studies in adrenocortical cancer, we raise one critical clinical issue-the risk of peritoneal dissemination following laparoscopic resection of adrenocortical cancer. In a retrospective case series of 267 patients referred to the NCI for the treatment of recurrent or advanced adrenocortical cancer, we found extensive peritoneal dissemination in 25 of the 45 patients (55.6%) who had undergone laparoscopic resection, compared with only 7 of the 222 patients (3%) who had undergone an open resection (P < 0.0001). Although this has been debated in the literature, our data argue for an end to laparoscopic resection of adrenocortical cancers to avoid peritoneal dissemination, a complication of laparoscopy that is uniformly fatal.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalClinical Cancer Research
    Volume22
    Issue number20
    Pages (from-to)4989-5000
    Number of pages12
    ISSN1078-0432
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Oct 2016

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