Test Code ACC Adrenal Mass Panel, 24 Hour, Urine
Shipping Instructions
Ship specimens frozen.
Necessary Information
The following information is required. Testing cannot proceed without this information (NA or Not Applicable are not acceptable responses).
-Age at diagnosis (Years, not offered for pediatric patients)
-Gender (Male, Female)
-Mode of discovery (incidental, cancer staging, other)
-Tumor diameter (mm)
-Unenhanced computerized tomography (CT) (Hounsfield units)
-Hormonal excess (Yes = Present, No=Absent)
-Collection duration in hours and 24-hour volume in milliliters
If information is not provided within 5 days of specimen receipt at MCL, testing may be delayed or canceled.
If not ordering electronically, Adrenal Mass Panel Patient Information is required.
Specimen Required
Supplies: Sarstedt Aliquot Tube, 5 mL (T914)
Container/Tube: Plastic urine tube
Specimen Volume: 4 mL
Collection Instructions:
1. Collect urine for a full 24 hours (required) and record the total volume.
2. Do not add preservatives. Specimens containing preservatives will be canceled.
3. Entire 24 hour collection must be mixed well prior to aliquoting into a 5 mL plastic tube.
Additional Information: See Urine Preservatives-Collection and Transportation for 24-Hour Urine Specimens for multiple collections.
Forms
Adrenal Mass Panel Patient Information is required if not ordering electronically.
Useful For
Aiding in assessing malignancy in adrenal masses
May aid in improving diagnostic and prognostic prediction and dissect disease mechanisms for the following applications:
-Diagnostic assessment and follow up of adrenal cortical carcinoma
-Differential diagnostic assessment of adrenal tumors
-Additional assessment related to Cushing syndrome, mild autonomous cortisol secretion, primary aldosteronism, inborn errors of steroidogenesis, polycystic ovary syndrome
This test is not useful for establishing eligibility for a specific treatment as results must be interpreted in conjunction with the clinical status of the patient.
Special Instructions
Method Name
Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry, High-Resolution Accurate Mass (LC-MS/MS HRAM)
Reporting Name
Adrenal Mass Panel, 24 Hr, USpecimen Type
UrineSpecimen Minimum Volume
2 mL
Specimen Stability Information
Specimen Type | Temperature | Time | Special Container |
---|---|---|---|
Urine | Frozen (preferred) | 90 days | |
Refrigerated | 14 days |
Reject Due To
Gross hemolysis | OK |
Gross icterus | OK |
Clinical Information
Approximately 80 million computerized tomography (CT) scans are performed in the United States every year. Adrenal tumors are found incidentally in about 5% of patients undergoing abdominal CT. Most of these tumors will be benign, but a small fraction are adrenal cortical carcinomas (ACC), a cancer with high mortality and frequent recurrence. Even for localized disease, the 5-year survival rates do not exceed 65%, while distant spread is associated with a greater than 90% mortality rate. Early diagnosis of a malignant adrenal mass is therefore imperative to assure timely and appropriate therapy.
Unfortunately, CT imaging alone is very limited in its ability to distinguish benign from malignant adrenal tumors since only very small and hypodense lesions can be easily dismissed as benign. The sizeable group of patients with larger or denser tumors ends up with an arduous workup that frequently includes additional imaging studies, hormonal testing, and biopsy. However, even the latter has both a high diagnostic false-positive and false-negative rate, and ultimately the tumor is often resected, sometimes unnecessarily. On the other hand, the delays due to the diagnostic work might compromise optimal care for those tumors that prove malignant.
In addition, patients who are believed to probably not have adrenal cancer after their workup, and those who opt out of surgery, often still require long-term follow up with regular re-imaging and repeated hormone testing, with resultant radiation exposure and high healthcare costs.
This adrenal mass panel is a noninvasive and more accurate test to diagnose malignant adrenal tumors, via urinary steroid profiling. It differentiates ACC, a rare and lethal tumor, from benign adrenocortical adenomas (ACA), including those that overproduce corticosteroids, or mineral steroids, or sex steroids, or those that are hormonally inactive. The test utilizes both clinical and laboratory data. The clinical parameters are age at diagnosis and sex of the patient, the size of the tumor by CT scanning and its CT density in Hounsfield units, whether it was detected incidentally or not, and whether there is evidence of hormone overproduction. All of this data are readily available for almost all patients with an adrenal mass and are used by an algorithm to calculate the pretest probability of having ACC. The steroid profile testing is then performed, and the results are added into the risk calculation algorithm to generate an integrated probability. The final result will provide the referring physicians a highly accurate probability for ACC and will thereby facilitate the optimal choice of further investigation, if any, based on an informed discussion between doctor and patient. In addition, it allows, albeit with lesser accuracy, the detection of malignant adrenal tumors that are not ACCs.
Finally, standalone steroid profiles can be performed for the purpose of offering the diagnosis of complex assessment of steroidal disorders, disease monitoring of patients with ACC, and for novel investigations, such as biopharma studies.
Understanding the Adrenal Glands:
The human body has 2 adrenal glands, one above each kidney. Adrenal glands influence many processes and functions of the body, mainly through production of 3 types of steroid hormones:
-Mineralocorticoids (eg, aldosterone, which helps control blood pressure)
-Glucocorticoids (eg, cortisol, which is important for metabolism, immune response, and stress)
-Sex steroids (eg, DHEAS, a precursor of testosterone and estradiol)
These steroids are all synthesized from cholesterol via enzymes in the adrenal glands. In benign ACA, near-normal levels of precursor and bioactive steroids are produced. By contrast, ACC frequently shows abnormal patterns of steroid production. By measuring 25 different steroid metabolites, even subtle abnormalities can be detected. This is the basis for the assessment capability of profiling 25 steroids. In addition, catecholamines-the "flight or fight hormones"-are also synthesized in a different portion of the adrenal glands. This portion is not examined in the ACC panel.
Epidemiology of Adrenal Tumors:
Adrenal masses are found in 1% to 5% of the adult population. The prevalence increases with age, to around 10% in 70-year-old patients.
Although the majority of these tumors are benign, around 30% of adrenal tumors (>4cm) are malignant (half are represented by ACC), and the survival rate for these patients is very poor unless detected early.
Reference Values
Note: Due to the wide range of urine steroid metabolite concentrations seen in healthy individuals and their skewed distribution, the reference values are based on the back calculated ± 3SD of log transformed data.
Males 18-49 years:
Androsterone: 182-29,212 mcg/24 h
Etiocholanolone: 133-23,272 mcg/24 h
Dehydroepiandrosterone: <5-81,554 mcg/24 h
16a-OH-Dehydroepiandrosterone: 13-29,945 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenetriol: 23-7,328 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenediol: 13-2,823 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Corticosterone: 8-1,961 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Deoxycorticosterone: <5-316 mcg/24 h
Pregnanediol: 12-3,812 mcg/24 h
17a-OH-Pregnanolone: 15-2,466 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriol: 66-9,409 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriolone: <5-550 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrodeoxycortisol: 7-1520 mcg/24 h
Cortisol: <5-903 mcg/24 h
6B-OH-Cortisol: 13-2,303 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisol: 152-22,723 mcg/24 h
5a-Tetrahydrocortisol: 157-24,059 mcg/24 h
B-Cortol: 30-5,115 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Androsterone: 108-11,987 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Etiocholanolone: 22-8,312 mcg/24 h
Cortisone: 12-842 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisone: 271-44,355 mcg/24 h
a-Cortolone: 140-14,885 mcg/24 h
B-Cortolone: 72-9,740 mcg/24 h
11-Oxoetiocholanolone: 70-8,446 mcg/24 h
Males ≥50 years:
Androsterone: 118-25,389 mcg/24 h
Etiocholanolone: 127-15,640 mcg/24 h
Dehydroepiandrosterone: 7-4,260 mcg/24 h
16a-OH-Dehydroepiandrosterone: 11-6,183 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenetriol: 24-2,162 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenediol: 17-1,296 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Corticosterone: 16-1,674 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Deoxycorticosterone: <5-297 mcg/24 h
Pregnanediol: 23-1,846 mcg/24 h
17a-OH-Pregnanolone: 18-1,747 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriol: 115-5,432 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriolone: 5-221 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrodeoxycortisol: 12-1,277 mcg/24 h
Cortisol: 12-597 mcg/24 h
6B-OH-Cortisol: 22-2,406 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisol: 331-19,009 mcg/24 h
5a-Tetrahydrocortisol: 155-35,266 mcg/24 h
B-Cortol: 56-3,541 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Androsterone: 142-13,135 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Etiocholanolone: 69-6,805 mcg/24 h
Cortisone: 24-732 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisone: 454-34,576 mcg/24 h
a-Cortolone: 211-17,591 mcg/24 h
B-Cortolone: 114-8,434 mcg/24 h
11-Oxoetiocholanolone: 155-7,174 mcg/24 h
Females 18-49 years:
Androsterone: 90-29,625 mcg/24 h
Etiocholanolone: 127-24,568 mcg/24 h
Dehydroepiandrosterone: <5-12,317 mcg/24 h
16a-OH-Dehydroepiandrosterone: 5-31,248 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenetriol: 17-4,166 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenediol: 6-2,900 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Corticosterone: 13-1,548 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Deoxycorticosterone: <5-833 mcg/24 h
Pregnanediol: 8-44,760 mcg/24 h
17a-OH-Pregnanolone: 7-3,208 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriol: 50-9,768 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriolone: <5-139 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrodeoxycortisol: 7-1,047 mcg/24 h
Cortisol: 11-642 mcg/24 h
6B-OH-Cortisol: 22-2,061 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisol: 185-16,515 mcg/24 h
5a-Tetrahydrocortisol: 45-22,591 mcg/24 h
B-Cortol: 28-4260 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Androsterone: 59-12,462 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Etiocholanolone: 32-6,354 mcg/24 h
Cortisone: 19-749 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisone: 262-32,461 mcg/24 h
a-Cortolone: 207-13,931 mcg/24 h
B-Cortolone: 63-7,489 mcg/24 h
11-Oxoetiocholanolone: 63-7,449 mcg/24 h
Females ≥50 years:
Androsterone: 32-10,134 mcg/24 h
Etiocholanolone: 52-10,946 mcg/24 h
Dehydroepiandrosterone: <5-10,046 mcg/24 h
16a-OH-Dehydroepiandrosterone: <5-9,982 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenetriol: 10-1,901 mcg/24 h
5-Pregnenediol: <5-2,732 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Corticosterone: 14-1,229 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydro-11-Deoxycorticosterone: <5-123 mcg/24 h
Pregnanediol: 8-2,138 mcg/24 h
17a-OH-Pregnanolone: <5-571 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriol: 26-3,444 mcg/24 h
Pregnanetriolone: <5-348 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrodeoxycortisol: 8-801 mcg/24 h
Cortisol: 9-336 mcg/24 h
6B-OH-Cortisol: 25-1,365 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisol: 237-14,050 mcg/24 h
5a-Tetrahydrocortisol: 92-12,604 mcg/24 h
B-Cortol: 29-3289 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Androsterone: 86-9,280 mcg/24 h
11B-OH-Etiocholanolone: 40-7,002 mcg/24 h
Cortisone: 15-555 mcg/24 h
Tetrahydrocortisone: 359-24,320 mcg/24 h
a-Cortolone: 125-17,472 mcg/24 h
B-Cortolone: 82-5,784 mcg/24 h
11-Oxoetiocholanolone: 78-6,571 mcg/24 h
Reference values have not been established for patients who are younger than 18 years of age.
Day(s) Performed
Monday
Report Available
7 to 18 daysPerforming Laboratory
Mayo Clinic Laboratories in RochesterTest Classification
This test was developed and its performance characteristics determined by Mayo Clinic in a manner consistent with CLIA requirements. It has not been cleared or approved by the US Food and Drug Administration.CPT Code Information
0015M