imaging of the adrenal glands

96
IMAGING OF THE ADRENAL GLANDS

Upload: satish-naga

Post on 25-Jun-2015

675 views

Category:

Health & Medicine


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Imaging of the adrenal glands

IMAGING OF THE ADRENAL GLANDS

Page 2: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ANATOMY

•Normal size: 2-4 cm CC,smooth limbs without nodularity, max thickness 10 mm.

•Inverted Y, V or L configuration.

Page 3: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Lambda-shaped body and 2 limbs.

Inverted Y-shaped body with 2 limbs that point posteriorly.

Normal CT appearance

Page 4: Imaging of the adrenal glands

NORMAL ADRENALNORMAL ADRENAL

Right – Suprarenal– Posterior to IVC– Lateral to right crus– Medial to right lobe of the liver

Left– Lateral to left crus and aorta– Posterior to pancreas and splenic vessels

Page 5: Imaging of the adrenal glands

II. Imaging characterization of adrenal masses

II. Imaging characterization of adrenal masses

Page 6: Imaging of the adrenal glands

The Hormonally Active Mass

Cortex:• Functional adenomas (Cushing syndrome, Conn

syndrome, or hyperandrogenism).• Carcinomas ( Majority Cushing’s syndrome).

Medulla: • Pheochromocytomas (hypersecretes

cathecolamines)

Page 7: Imaging of the adrenal glands

The Hormonally Active Mass

• The work-up of a suspected hyperfunctioning adrenal mass (pheochromocytoma and aldosteronoma) should start with appropriate biochemical screening tests followed by thin-collimation computed tomography (CT).

• Unilateral mass Conn’s syndrome (aldosterolonoma), Pheochromocytoma.

• Bilateral masses Hyperplasia (Cushing’s diseasePituitary adenoma)

Page 8: Imaging of the adrenal glands

• CT has become the study of choice to differentiate a benign adenoma from a metastasis in the oncology patient.

The oncology patient with an adrenal mass

Page 9: Imaging of the adrenal glands

NCCT

HU < 10

Benign

HU > 10

Delayed CECT (10 min)

Washout > 50%HU < 30

Benign

Washout < 50%HU > 30

Chemical Shift MRI

Signal drop-out

Benign

No signal drop-out

PETBiopsy

Page 10: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Incidentalomas:

Two main concerns exist with incidentalomas:

• The first is whether it is hormonally active, and the second is whether it is malignant.

• The treatment for a hormonally active adrenal tumor is surgery.

• The treatment for a malignancy depends on the cell type, spread, and location of the primary tumor.

Page 11: Imaging of the adrenal glands

From: eMedicine.com, Inc.

Page 12: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 13: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal mass characterization- MRI

• In phase and out of phase gradient echo MR sequences are used to diagnose adrenal adenomas.

• The signal intensity of the adrenal adenoma decreases on out of phase imaging.

• Precession frequencies of protons found in intracellular fat and protons in water cancel out each other's signal at the time the echo is acquired.

• The signal intensity of the adenoma follows that of the of bone marrow, because bone marrow also contains small amounts of adipose tissue.

• The spleen is used as organ of reference on OP images for subjective evaluation.

***Lipid-poor adenomas if an adrenal mass fails to exhibit signal drop out on out of phase imaging it could still be an adenoma.

Page 14: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal mass characterization

On the chemical shift imaging, signal intensity index, calculated as:

Signal intensity (SI) indexes (D)= [SI in-phase - SI opposed-phase] x 100 (SI in-phase)

A signal intensity index defined as D superior to 25% is used as positive diagnosis criteria for adenoma.

Page 15: Imaging of the adrenal glands

1.5 T

Chemical shift Imaging (CSI)

Schematic shows lipid and water protons precessing in and out of phase with respect to each other over time at 1.5 T. The sine wave depicts the signal intensity within a voxel over time as the water and lipid protons oscillate between in phase and out of phase after the radio-frequency excitation pulse is delivered.

Page 16: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenomedullary tumors :• Pheochromocytoma • Ganglioneuroblastoma • Neuroblastoma • Neuroendocrine

carcinoma

Adrenocortical carcinomas:-Functional

-Nonfunctional -Well differentiated

-Intermediate -Poorly differentiated to

anaplastic

Adrenocortical adenomas:-Functional- Cortisol, aldosterone,androgens-Non-functional

Primary neoplasms

Page 17: Imaging of the adrenal glands

From: eMedicine.com, Inc.

Page 18: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adenomas

• The prevalence of adrenal adenoma is age related. 0.14%for patients aged 20–29 years and 7% in those older than 70 years

• The majority of lesions are not functioning

• the presence of contralateral adrenal atrophy suggests that a lesion may be functioning, because ACTH secretion is suppressed by elevated cortisol levels

Page 19: Imaging of the adrenal glands

LIPID-RICH ADENOMA

• 70 % are lipid-rich– Clear cells have abundant intracytoplasmic fat

• CT – Low attenuation on nonenhanced CT– Threshold of < 10 HU is 71% sens, 98% spec [1]– Spec approaches 100% when considering other

features (size, shape, stability)– < 30 HU on delayed CECT also diagnostic

[1] Boland et al. AJR 1998; 171:201-4

Page 20: Imaging of the adrenal glands

LIPID-RICH ADENOMA

• MRI– Chemical shift imaging is the most sensitive way to

differentiate adenoma – Relies on the different resonance frequencies of

protons in fat and water molecules– Use spleen as internal standard– Look for signal drop-off (20%) on out-of-phase

images due to intra-voxel signal cancellation of the lipid and water protons

– 81-100% sens, 94-100% spec

Page 21: Imaging of the adrenal glands

LIPID-POOR ADENOMA

• 30% are lipid-poor and do not have low attenuation on CT

• Adenomas enhance rapidly and wash out rapidly (independent of lipid content)

• Reflects physiologic differences in perfusion between adenoma and other lesions

Page 22: Imaging of the adrenal glands

The precontrast attenuation varies according

to the presence or absence of lipid, with

mean attenuation in the range of

−2 to 16 HU in lipid-rich adenomas

20 to 25 HU in lipid-poor adenomas

Page 23: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADENOMA

-3.0 HU

Page 24: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adenomas

• Non-functioning adenomas (most common) Incidentalomas.

• Functional adenomas **15%-20% of all Cushing’s syndromes cases are

caused by adenomas or carcinomas .

** 80% of all Conn syndromes cases are caused by small adenomas (the remaining 20% are caused

essentially by adrenal hyperplasia rarely by carcinomas).

Page 25: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADENOMA

T1W OPT1W IP

Page 26: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADENOMA

T2W

T1W IP

T1W OP

Page 27: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADENOMA

Page 28: Imaging of the adrenal glands

The lipid-poor adenoma

• Although representing a minority of adrenal adenomas (30%) the lipid-poor variety cannot be accurately identified on unenhanced CT or chemical shift MR imaging.

• “..lipid-poor adrenal adenomas show enhancement and enhancement washout features nearly identical to lipid-rich adenomas and can be distinguished from nonadenomas on the basis of a percentage washout threshold value of 60% and a relative percentage washout of 40%.”

AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2000 Nov;175(5):1411-5.

Page 29: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Percentage of enhancement washout

[E-D/E-U] x 100 = % ICM washout after 10 min.

E= enhanced attenuation value

U= Unenhanced attn value

D= Delayed enhanced value (15 min)

E= 90 HU

U= 40 HU

D= 50 HU

[90-50/90-40] x 100 = 80% washout

Page 30: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Relative % washout

If unenhanced CT has not been performed:

(E-D) / E x 100

Optimal threshold 40% washout (sens 96%, Spec 100%)

• if threshold used is 50% then sens and spec= 100%

Page 31: Imaging of the adrenal glands

40 HU

114 HU

65 HU

[114-65/114-40] x 100 = 49/74 x 100 = 66% washout (>60 %)

Lipid poor adenoma

AJR:179, September 2002

[E-D/E-U] x 100

U

E

D

Page 32: Imaging of the adrenal glands

32 HU

83 HU

57 HU[83-57/83-32] x 100 = 26/51x 100 = 50% washout (<60 %)

Lung mets

AJR:179, September 2002

U

E

D

[E-D/E-U] x 100

Page 33: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Conn’s disease

Hypertension and hypokalemia

Causes: Adrenal adenoma 80%, adrenal hyperplasia 20%

Page 34: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal hyperplasia

Truncal obesity and elevated plasma Cortisol

**Hyperplasia- 70%•Cushing’s disease- 90%•Ectopic ACTH- 10%

**Adenoma 20%**Carcinoma 10%

Cushing’s syndrome is caused by:

Page 35: Imaging of the adrenal glands

NCCT

HU < 10

Benign

HU > 10

Delayed CECT (10 min)

Washout > 50%HU < 30

Benign

Washout < 50%HU > 30

Chemical Shift MRI

Signal drop-out

Benign

No signal drop-out

PETBiopsy

Page 36: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASESMETASTASES

Common site for mets Variable appearance

– Any size– Round or lobulated– Homogeneous or inhomogeneous– Calcified– Necrotic

Even in pt with known malignancy, 50% of adrenal masses may be adenomas

Page 37: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASESMETASTASES

Features that favor mets include:– Size > 3 cm– Poorly defined margins– Thick, enhancing rim– Inhomogeneous– Invasion of adjacent structures– Mets elsewhere

Page 38: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 39: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 40: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASES

Metastatic adrenal tumors - Most common potential primaries include the following:

• Lung • Breast • Melanoma • Renal cell carcinoma • Extra-adrenal lymphoma • Leukemias • Pancreatic carcinoma • Colonic carcinoma • Ovarian carcinoma

Page 41: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASES

Page 42: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASES

[E-D/E-U] x 100

33% washout

Page 43: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASES

Page 44: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASES

PET CT

FDG

FDG

Page 45: Imaging of the adrenal glands

METASTASES

Melanoma

T1W

T2W FS

Page 46: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL CARCINOMAADRENAL CARCINOMA

Rare Cortex 10% bilateral 50% functional Usually large at

presentation (4-10 cm)

Page 47: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL CARCINOMAADRENAL CARCINOMA

Heterogeneous, irregular contour

Calcification in 30% Large areas of internal

hemorrhage and necrosis in most

Page 48: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL CARCINOMAADRENAL CARCINOMA

Look for invasion of adjacent organs and veins

Page 49: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenocortical carcinomas

Page 50: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenocortical carcinomasAdrenocortical carcinomas

Left renal vein

Page 51: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenocortical carcinoma

68-year-old woman with right upper quadrant palpable mass.

Page 52: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Precocious puberty in a child.

Adrenocortical carcinoma

Page 53: Imaging of the adrenal glands

PHEOCHROMOCYTOMAPHEOCHROMOCYTOMA

Neoplasm of chromafin cells in medulla (10% extra adrenal)

Capacity to store and release catecholamines

0.1% of causes of HTN

Page 54: Imaging of the adrenal glands

PheochromocytomaPheochromocytoma

"10-percent rule"

10% bilateral

10% malignant

10% extra-adrenal

associated syndromes:

neurofibromatosis

von-Hippel-Lindau

multiple endrocine neoplasia: MEN-2 and MEN-1

extra-adrenal sites:

detected with MIBG ( I 131-MIBG-NE analog)

Organ of Zuckerkandl (most common)

Page 55: Imaging of the adrenal glands

PHEOCHROMOCYTOMAPHEOCHROMOCYTOMA

Size determines imaging features

< 4 cm– Well defined and

homogeneous

Larger tumors more likely to have central necrosis

Page 56: Imaging of the adrenal glands

PHEOCHROMOCYTOMAPHEOCHROMOCYTOMA

Classically hyperintense on T2

Enhance avidly

Page 57: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 58: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Pheochromocytoma

Page 59: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Pheochromocytoma

Page 60: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Pheochromocytoma

Page 61: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Pheochromocytoma

T1W T2W

Page 62: Imaging of the adrenal glands

T1W T2W

T1W POSTGAD

Pheochromocytoma

Page 63: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Paragangliomas

• Extra-adrenal paragangliomas, as the name implies, can occur anywhere along the paraganglionic chain, but are most commonly found in the superior para-aortic region. between the diaphragm and the lower poles of the kidneys.

• Patients often present with headaches, palpitations, sweating, and hypertension.

• Clinical suspicion for extra-adrenal paraganglioma is usually confirmed by elevated urinary catecholamines and their metabolites.

Page 64: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 65: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Paraganglioma of the Organ of Zuckerkandl

Page 66: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Von-Hippel-Lindau

VHL- pheochromocytoma, carotid body tumor and islet cell tumor of the pancreas.

T2W

Page 67: Imaging of the adrenal glands

MYELOLIPOMAMYELOLIPOMA

Rare benign tumor (0.2%)Composed of myeloid, erythroid, fat

– Causes heterogeneous appearanceOccasionally calcifyPresence of pure fat on imaging is diagnosticThe primary complication-->retroperitoneal

hemorrhageClinically silent unless very large or

hemorrhage do not undergo malignant transformation

Page 68: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal myelolipoma

Page 69: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal myelolipoma

Page 70: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal myelolipoma

Page 71: Imaging of the adrenal glands

LYMPHOMALYMPHOMA

NHL more commonly than Hodgkin’s– 4% have adrenal involvement

Adrenal infiltration most often occurs with retroperitoneal lymphoma

50% bilateralMass or diffuse enlargement of gland

Page 72: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 73: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL HEMORRHAGEADRENAL HEMORRHAGE

Causes– Trauma (80%)– Systemic anticoagulant therapy– Sepsis (Waterhouse-Friedrichson syndrome)– Stress– Neoplasm

20% bilateral – Adrenal insufficiency rare

Page 74: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL HEMORRHAGEADRENAL HEMORRHAGE

Acute– Round or oval mass, 1-5 cm– Increased attenuation or isodense to liver,

kidney, or muscle on NCCT– Typical signal patterns of blood products on

MRI

Page 75: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 76: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal hemorrhage

Page 77: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL HEMORRHAGEADRENAL HEMORRHAGE

Chronic– Will shrink over 6 months– “Ring pattern” on MRI– Pseudocyst– Residual calcification

Page 78: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 79: Imaging of the adrenal glands

s/p Adrenal hemorrhage

DDX:

•Neuroblastoma

•TB

•Carcinoma

Page 80: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Granulomatous (TB) disease

• Usually caused by hematogenous spread of systemic infection, resulting in bilateral enlargement and replacement of both the adrenal cortex and medulla by caseous necrosis.

• This may cause adrenal failure by total or near-total destruction of both glands.

• Calcification of the glands can be detected in about half the cases.

• Imaging findings of adrenal tuberculosis are nonspecific and consist often of normal or small size adrenal glands, containing scattered calcifications. Findings are best detected on CT.

Page 81: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal histoplasmosis

Page 82: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal histoplasmosis

Page 83: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Adrenal TB

Page 84: Imaging of the adrenal glands

ADRENAL CYSTADRENAL CYST

True cyst (45%)– Epithelial lining– Looks like a simple cyst

Pseudocyst (39%)– Results from old hemorrhage– May see a calcified rim

Parasitic (< 10%)– Echinococcosus

Page 85: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 86: Imaging of the adrenal glands
Page 87: Imaging of the adrenal glands

Lung carcinoma necrotic mets

Cysts?

Irregular thick wall

Page 88: Imaging of the adrenal glands

SUMMARY

• Adrenal Embryology , Anatomy and Histology.• Physiology of the Adrenal Gland (endocrine gland).• Clinical importance of adrenal masses characterization.• Imaging Techniques (CT, MRI).• Non-hyperfunctioning Lesions of the Adrenal Cortex

(incidentaloma) and their clinical significance for the oncology patience.

• Hyperfunctioning Lesions of the Adrenal Cortex and endocrinologic clinical presentations.

• Neoplasms of the adrenal cortex.• Neoplasms of the Adrenal Medulla -pheochromocytoma• Metastatic Neoplasms to the Adrenal Glands.

Miscellaneous Conditions of the Adrenals (infection, trauma, cyst)

Page 89: Imaging of the adrenal glands

CT Scan - DDx By appearance:

Diameter less than 2 cm: consider Conn’s syndrome (recommend thinner cuts to better visualize)

Diameter greater than 5 cm: consider carcinoma

Bilateral: consider metastasis, infection, hyperplasia

Calcifications: consider pheochromocytoma, carcinoma, cyst (peripheral), infection, myelolipoma, hemangioma, ganglioneuroma

Heterogeneous appearance: consider adenoma, myelolipoma, hemangioma

Central area of necrosis: consider pheochromocytoma, carcinoma, granulomatous infection

Nodularity:, metastasis

Page 90: Imaging of the adrenal glands

By Attenuation:

-115 to -30 HU: consider myelolipoma (lower than adenoma)

Less than 10 HU: consider adenoma

50 to 90 HU: consider acute to subacute hematoma

Page 91: Imaging of the adrenal glands

By enhancement and contrast washout characteristics

• If the attenuation of the adrenal gland is over 10 HU on nonenhanced CT, contrast material–enhanced CT should be performed and washout calculated.

• Over 50%-60% washout of contrast material on a 15-minute delayed CT scan is diagnostic of an adenoma.

Page 92: Imaging of the adrenal glands

thanku

Page 93: Imaging of the adrenal glands

• Fat-containing adrenal masses can be classified into two main types: those that contain intracellularfat (eg, adenoma) and those with macroscopicfat (eg, myelolipoma). Adrenal masses that contain intracellular fat have been shown to lose signal intensity on chemical shift out-of-phase images compared with in-phase images owing to the presence of intracellular lipid. Adrenal lesions that contain macroscopic fat demonstrate a loss of signal intensity on fat-saturated images.

Page 94: Imaging of the adrenal glands

For patients in whom a pheochromocytoma issuspected and an adrenal mass is not identified atCT or MR imaging, nuclear medicine imagingcan be used. I-131 MIBG and In-111 octreotideare the two radiopharmaceuticals used to evaluatefor a pheochromocytoma. I-131 MIBG is a structuralanalog of norepinephrine, which is stored inneurosecretory granules of the adrenal medulla.Abdominal imaging is performed 24–72 hoursafter administration of the agent, and whole-bodyimaging should be performed to detect extraadrenallesions. If there is a high clinical suspicion of aperivesicular paraganglioma, bladder catheterizationmay be necessary as the agent is excretedin the urine. When pheochromocytoma is suspected,

Page 95: Imaging of the adrenal glands

any focal uptake of I-131 MIBG in theadrenal gland is abnormal (Fig 6). The reportedsensitivity of I-131 MIBG for detection of a pheochromocytomais 80%–90%, with a specificity of90%–100% (7–9). I-131 MIBG scintigraphy isuseful to detect the 10% of pheochromocytomasthat are extraadrenal and to document metastaticdisease or residual tumor after surgery.In-111 octreotide, the second agent used todetect pheochromocytomas, is a synthetic octapeptideanalog of somatostatin that shows uptakein a variety of tumors that contain somatostatinreceptors. A total of 5 mCi (185 MBq) ofIn-111 octreotide is administered intravenously,and whole-body imaging is performed at 4 and 24hours after injection. In-111 octreotide has a sensitivityof 75%–90% for detection of pheochro

Page 96: Imaging of the adrenal glands

There is a complementary rolefor In-111 octreotide and I-131 MIBG, since25% of pheochromocytomas are seen only withI-131 MIBG and another 25% are seen only withIn-111 octreotide. The remaining 50% of pheochromocytomasare visualized with both agents