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Precocious puberty and other endocrine disorders during mitotane treatment for paediatric adrenocortical carcinoma - case series and literature review. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare and serious type of cancer, and mitotane is the main medicine used to treat it.
  • A study looked at 4 young kids with ACC who had early signs of puberty while being treated with mitotane.
  • The results showed that the kids had various health issues, like needing extra doses of medicine to help their adrenal glands and sometimes experiencing neurological problems.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is rare and an aggressive tumour. Mitotane is the mainstay adjuvant drug in treating ACC. The study aimed to describe patients diagnosed with precocious puberty (PP) and other endocrinological complications during mitotane therapy.

Material And Methods: This retrospective study enrolled 4 patients with ACC treated with mitotane therapy complicated by PP. We analysed clinical manifestations, radiological, histopathological findings, and hormonal results.

Results: The median age at the diagnosis of ACC was 1.5 years. All patients were treated with surgery and mitotane, accompanied by chemotherapy regimens in 2 cases. The median time from surgery to the initiation of mitotane therapy was 26 days. During mitotane treatment, PP was confirmed based on symptoms, and hormonal and imaging tests. In one patient, incomplete peripheral PP was followed by central PP. The median time from the therapy initiation to the first manifestations of PP was 4 months. Additionally, due to mitotane-induced adrenal insufficiency, patients required a supraphysiological dose of hydrocortisone (HC), and in one patient, mineralocorticoid (MC) replacement with fludrocortisone was necessary. In 2 patients, hypothyroidism was diagnosed. All patients presented neurological symptoms of varying expression, which were more severe in younger children.

Conclusions: The side effects of using mitotane should be recognized quickly and adequately treated. In prepubertal children, PP could be a complication of therapy. The need to use supraphysiological doses of HC, sometimes with MC, should be highlighted. Some patients require levothyroxine replacement therapy. The neurotoxicity of mitotane is a significant clinical problem.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11037260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5114/pedm.2023.133315DOI Listing

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