- Incidence in the population is 2-8%
- Diagnosis is often made as an incidental finding on CT examination.
- In patient with no known primary, an adrenal mass is almost always a benign adenoma
- In a patient with a known neoplasm, especially lung cancer, an adrenal mass is problematic and diagnosing a metastasis versus an adenoma is critical for prognosis
Imaging findings
- CT
- Size greater than 4 cm tend to be metastases or adrenal carcinoma
- Heterogeneous appearance and irregular shape are malignant characteristics
- Homogeneous and smooth are benign characteristics.
- Intracellular lipid in adenoma results in low attenuation on CT
- Little intracytoplasmic fat in metastases results in high attenuation on non-enhanced CT
- Non-enhanced CT (NECT)
- Threshold 10 HU
- Sensitivity 79%, specificity 96%
- Contrast-enhanced CT (CECT)
- Because majority of CT examinations in oncology use IV contrast, the % washout is useful after 10 minutes.
- Adenomas have greater than 50% washout after 10 minutes
- Washout can also be used on adrenal masses that measure > 10 HU on NECT
- Alternative is to do MR or PET
- Size greater than 4 cm tend to be metastases or adrenal carcinoma
- MR
- Chemical Shift
- Most sensitive method for differentiating adenomas from metastases
- Sensitivity 81-100%. Specificity 94-100%.
- The difference in resonance rate of protons in fat and water is exploited in chemical shift.
- Intracellular lipid and water in same voxel result in summation of signal on "in-phase" and canceling out of signal on "out of phase"
- Spleen or muscle is used as an internal standard to visually quantify signal drop-off
- Liver is not a reliable standard because of steatosis
- Chemical Shift