AI Article Synopsis

  • Pulmonary neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) frequently cause ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone syndrome (EAS), leading to complications such as lung infections that can appear similar to NENs on imaging.
  • A study analyzed imaging data from 59 EAS patients, comparing 45 with NENs to 14 with tumor-like infections, revealing distinct clinical and imaging features that help differentiate between the two conditions.
  • Results indicate that CT scans are instrumental for identifying and characterizing pulmonary lesions in EAS, aiding in timely diagnosis and treatment decisions.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Pulmonary neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are the most frequent cause of ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone syndrome (EAS); lung infection is common in EAS. An imaging finding of infection in EAS patients can mimic NENs. This retrospective study investigated EAS-associated pulmonary imaging indicators.

Methods: Forty-five pulmonary NENs and 27 tumor-like infections from 59 EAS patients (45 NEN and 14 infection patients) were included. Clinical manifestations, CT features, F-FDG, or Ga-DOTATATE-PET/CT images and pathological results were collected.

Results: High-sensitivity C-reactive protein (p < 0.001) and expectoration occurrence (p = 0.04) were higher, and finger oxygen saturation (p = 0.01) was lower in the infection group than the NENs group. Higher-grade NENs were underrepresented in our cohort. Pulmonary NENs were solitary primary tumors, 80% of which were peripheral tumors. Overlying vessel sign and airway involvement were more frequent in the NENs group (p < 0.001). Multifocal (p = 0.001) and peripheral (p = 0.02) lesions, cavity (p < 0.001), spiculation (p = 0.01), pleural retraction (p < 0.001), connection to pulmonary veins (p = 0.02), and distal atelectasis or inflammatory exudation (p = 0.001) were more frequent in the infection group. The median CT value increment between the non-contrast and arterial phases was significantly higher in NENs lesions (p < 0.001). Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis indicated a moderate predictive ability at 48.3 HU of delta CT value (sensitivity, 95.0%; specificity, 54.1%).

Conclusion: Chest CT scans are valuable for localizing and characterizing pulmonary lesions in rare EAS, thereby enabling prompt differential diagnosis and treatment. CRITICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Thin-slice CT images are valuable for the localization and identification of pulmonary ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone syndrome lesions, leading to prompt differential diagnosis and effective treatment.

Key Points: Lung tumor-like infections can mimic neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) in ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone syndrome (EAS) patients. NENs are solitary lesions, whereas infections are multiple peripheral pseudotumors each with identifying imaging findings. Typical CT signs aid in localization and creating an appropriate differential diagnosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11294316PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13244-024-01775-9DOI Listing

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