Single-Incision Transperitoneal Laparoscopic Left Adrenalectomy

Óscar Vidal, Emiliano Astudillo, Mauro Valentini, Cesar Ginestà, Juan C. García-Valdecasas and Laureano Fernandez-Cruz

 

 

Abstract

Background  

Laparoscopic adrenalectomy via three or four trocars is a well-established procedure. This report describes the initial experience with single-incision laparoscopic surgery (SILS) using the transperitoneal approach for left adrenalectomy.

Methods

Between April 2010 and August 2011, all consecutive patients with adrenal masses, including Conn’s syndrome, Cushing’s adenoma, and nonfunctional adrenal tumors, who agreed to undergo SILS adrenalectomy were included in a prospective study. The left 2.5-cm subcostal incision was the sole point of entry. Data of patients who underwent SILS adrenalectomy were compared with those from an uncontrolled group of patients who underwent conventional laparoscopic adrenalectomy during the same study period.

Results

There were 20 patients in each study group (20 men, 20 women; mean age [SD] = 50 [6.5] years). SILS was successfully performed and none of the patients required conversion to an open procedure. In one case of SILS procedure, an additional lateral 5-mm port was needed for retraction of the kidney. The mean (SD) duration of the operation was 95 (20) min in the SILS group and 80 (8) min in the conventional laparoscopic adrenalectomy group (p = 0.052). There were no intraoperative or postoperative complications. There were no differences between the two study groups with respect to postoperative pain, number of patients who resumed oral intake within the first 24 h, final pathologic diagnosis, and length of hospital stay.

Conclusion  

SILS left adrenalectomy is a technically feasible and safe procedure in carefully selected patients. The definitive clinical, aesthetic and functional advantages of this technique require further analysis.

 

 

 

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From http://www.springerlink.com/content/h60075322750m0x0/

 

New drug shows promise in patients with rare illness

Two in Montreal with Cushing’s disease were among 16 in international trial

By AARON DERFEL, The Gazette

Quebecers suffering from Cushing’s disease – a rare hormonal disorder – have some reason to be hopeful after a clinical trial conducted partly in Montreal has shown promising results of a new drug.

About 400 to 500 Quebecers have Cushing’s disease or syndrome, a disorder that produces tumours on the pituitary gland, leading to a spike in cortisol levels.

The excess cortisol can cause a wide range of problems, including obesity, hypertension and diabetes as well as sleep and mood disorders.

In some people, deposits of fat accumulate on the back of the neck and shoulders, an effect known as a “buffalo hump.”

Until now, surgery and radiotherapy have been the only options for many patients. However, a drug developed by Novartis Pharmaceuticals has been found to act on the tumours, cutting cortisol levels an average of 50 per cent.

In some patients – two of them from Quebec – cortisol levels returned to normal.

The drug, pasireotide, involves twice-daily injections. The treatment has yet to be approved by Health Canada.

“This study is very promising, especially for patients for whom complete surgical removal of tumours – the standard treatment for this disease – was not possible,” said Dr. André Lacroix, an endocrinologist at the Centre hospitalier de l’université de Montréal.

Lacroix and his colleagues tested the drug on four patients. In addition to the two who “experienced a complete regression of all symptoms” of Cushing’s disease, the two others reported drops in their cortisol levels and an improvement in their health, Lacroix noted.

The findings of the international study of 16 patients were published in the latest edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Pasireotide acts by binding to certain receptors on the tumours. Lacroix’s team has also carried out a separate study of another drug that targets a different receptor.

He suggested that using the two drugs together might prove even more beneficial, but this must be borne out by further research.

The ideal patients for the drug therapy would be those whose tumours are too small for surgery, Lacroix said.

Each year in Quebec, there are about 15 new cases of Cushing’s disease, and doctors at the CHUM treat about 150 patients.

aderfel@montrealgazette.com

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

 

 

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/health/
drug+shows+promise+patients+with+rare+illness/6340316/story.html

 

 

We Have Lost Another Cushie.

I don’t have permission yet to post any details but suffice it to say, losing even one Cushing’s patient is one too many.

We have a list of those that we know about here http://www.cushie.info/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&id=… and I’m sure that there are many more that we never hear about.

Cushing’s can be fatal.  

“Cushing’s disease is a rare disorder, with three to five cases per million people. It can affect all ages and both genders but is most common in otherwise healthy young women,” says Beverly M.K. Biller, MD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital Neuroendocrine Unit, senior author of the study. “Often misdiagnosed, Cushing’s is associated with a broad range of health problems – causing physical changes, metabolic abnormalities and emotional difficulties – and if not controlled, significantly increases patients’ risk of dying much younger than expected.

 

If you think you have Cushing’s, please keep fighting as long as you need to to get help.  We don’t need any more names on the In Memory list!

Boston, Pituitary Day, 2012

On behalf of the Brain Science Foundation, the Department of Neurosurgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the BWH Pituitary/Neuroendocrine Center, you are invited to attend Pituitary Day. This program will take place on Saturday, March 24, 2012, from 7:45 AM to 5:00 PM at the Bornstein Amphitheater at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

 

 Pituitary Day is a conference that unites patients, caregivers, family and friends with leading clinicians, researchers, nurses and other experts to discuss the latest in pituitary diagnosis and treatment. By way of a series of presentations and panel discussions, we will discuss basic and new information related to pituitary disorders, including physical and psychological aspects, and other important patient issues.

 

Our expectation is for this to be a truly remarkable and empowering experience and we hope you will consider joining us this year. For more information, please contact Sarah Donnelly at 781-239-2903 or sarah@brainsciencefoundation.org.

 

When

Saturday March 24, 2012 from 7:45 AM to 5:00 PM EDT

Where

Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Bornstein Amphitheater 

45 Francis Street

Boston, MA 02115 

Click to Register

 

 

Experimental drug reduces cortisol levels, improves symptoms in Cushing’s disease

International phase 3 trial is largest study ever of rare endocrine disorder

 

A new investigational drug significantly reduced urinary cortisol levels and improved symptoms of Cushing’s disease in the largest clinical study of this endocrine disorder ever conducted. Results of the clinical trial conducted at centers on four continents appear in the March 8 New England Journal of Medicine and show that treatment with pasireotide cut cortisol secretion an average of 50 percent and returned some patient’s levels to normal. 

“Cushing’s disease is a rare disorder, with three to five cases per million people. It can affect all ages and both genders but is most common in otherwise healthy young women,” says Beverly M.K. Biller, MD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital Neuroendocrine Unit, senior author of the study. “Often misdiagnosed, Cushing’s is associated with a broad range of health problems – causing physical changes, metabolic abnormalities and emotional difficulties – and if not controlled, significantly increases patients’ risk of dying much younger than expected.”

One of several conditions that lead to Cushing’s syndrome – chronically elevated secretion of the hormone cortisol – Cushing’s disease is caused by a benign pituitary tumor that oversecretes the hormone ACTH, inducing increased cortisol secretion by the adrenal glands. Symptoms of Cushing’s syndrome include weight gain, hypertension, mood swings, irregular or absent periods, abnormalities of glucose processing – insulin resistance, glucose intolerance and type 2 diabetes – and cardiovascular disease. Since those symptoms are associated with many health problems, physicians may not consider the rare possibility of Cushing’s. The diagnosis can be difficult to make and usually requires the expertise of an endocrinologist. Since cortisol levels normally fluctuate during the day, a single blood test probably would not identify chronic elevation, so the most common diagnostic test measures a patient’s 24-hour urinary output. 

First-line treatment for Cushing’s disease is surgical removal of the ACTH-secreting tumor, which can lead to remission in 65 to 90 percent of patients who are treated by expert pituitary surgeons. But symptoms return in 10 to 30 percent of those patients, requiring repeat surgery, radiation therapy or treatment with drugs that interfere with part of the cortisol control system. Until last month, there was no specific FDA-approved medical treatment for Cushing’s syndrome; and while the newly approved drug mifepristone should benefit some patients, it does not affect the pituitary source of the condition or reduce cortisol levels. 

The current phase 3 trial of pasireotide – the first drug that blocks ACTH secretion by binding to somatostatin receptors on the pituitary tumor – was sponsored by Novartis Pharma and enrolled 162 patients at 62 sites in 18 countries. Almost 85 percent of participants had either persistent disease that had not responded to surgery or had recurrent disease. The other 15 percent were recently diagnosed but not appropriate candidates for surgery. Participants were randomly assigned to two groups, one starting at two daily 600-microgram injections of pasireotide, the other receiving 900-microgram doses. Three months into the 12-month trial, participants whose urinary cortisol levels remained more than twice the normal range had their dosage levels increased. During the rest of the trial, dosage could be further increased, if necessary, or reduced if side effects occurred. 

At the end of the study period, many patients had a significant decrease in their urinary cortisol levels, with 33 achieving levels within normal range at their original dosage by month 6 of the trial. Participants whose baseline levels were less than five times the upper limit of normal were more likely to achieve normal levels than those with higher baseline levels, and the average urinary cortisol decrease across all participants was about 50 percent. Many Cushing’s disease symptoms decreased, and it became apparent within the first two months whether or not an individual was going to respond to pasireotide. 

Transient gastrointestinal discomfort, known to be associated with medications in the same family as pasireotide, was an expected side effect. But the investigators observed elevated glucose levels in 73 percent of participants, something not seen to the same extent with other medications in this family. That will require close attention, since many Cushing’s patients already have trouble metabolizing glucose. Biller explains, “Those patients who already were diabetic had the greatest increases in blood sugar, and those who were pre-diabetic were more likely to become diabetic than those who began with normal blood sugar. However, elevations were even see in those who started at normal glucose levels, so this is real and needs to be monitored carefully.” 

Additional trials of pasireotide are in the works, and a phase 3 study of a long-acting version of the drug was recently announced. Biller notes that the potential addition of pasireotide to available medical treatments for Cushing’s disease would have a number of advantages. “It’s very important to have medications that work at different parts of the cortisol control system – which is the case for the currently used medications that work at the adrenal gland level, pasireotide which works at the pituitary gland, and mifepristone which blocks the action of cortisol at receptors in the body. Having more options that work in different ways is valuable because not all patients respond to one medicine and some may be unable to tolerate a specific drug’s side effects. 

“As we have more drugs available to treat Cushing’s,” she adds. “I think in the long run we may start using combinations of drugs, which is the approach we use in some patients with acromegaly, another disorder in which a pituitary tumor causes excess hormone secretion. Ultimately we hope to be able to give lower doses leading to fewer overall side effects, but that remains to be determined by future studies.” Biller is a professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. 

Annamaria Colao, MD, PhD, University of Naples, Italy, is the lead author of the New England Journal report. Additional co-authors are Stephan Petersenn, MD, University of Duisberg-Essen, Germany; John Newell-Price, MD, PhD, University of Sheffield, U.K.; James Findling, MD, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Feng Gu, MD, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Beijing, China; Mario Maldonado, MD, Ulrike Schoenherr, Dipl-Biol, and David Mills, MSc, Novartis Pharma; and Luiz Roberto Salgado, MD, University of São Paulo Medical School, Brazil. 

Massachusetts General Hospital, founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with an annual research budget of more than $750 million and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine.

From http://www.massgeneral.org/about/pressrelease.aspx?id=1444#.T2I2Ue9AMtQ.facebook