ECE2020 Audio ePoster Presentations Pituitary and Neuroendocrinology (217 abstracts)
1Department of Medicine, University of Malta Medical School, Mater Dei Hospital, Msida, Malta; 2Neuroendocrine Clinic, Mater Dei Hospital, Msida, Malta
Aim: There are few reports discussing incidence and characteristics of the whole group of Cushing’s syndrome patients in the literature. The aim was to establish the incidence of endogenous Cushing’s syndrome with in-depth analysis of their various subtypes in a well-defined population.
Methods: Retrospective cross-sectional analysis of Cushing’s syndrome patients diagnosed between 2008 and 2017. A thorough search for patients was carried out in the central hospital registries including outpatients departments, surgical registries, radiological department and specialty clinic databases.
Results: 26 patients were identified as diagnosed with Cushing’s syndrome over the 10-year period equating to a standardised incidence rate (SIR) of 4.7/1,000,000/yr with an almost equal SIR among males and females. Analysing the various subtypes of Cushing’s syndrome, the majority (n = 13) were due to an ACTH secreting pituitary adenoma (SIR 2.5/1,000,000/yr). In this subtype males had a SIR of 3.4/1,000,000/yr compared to 1.7/1,000,000/yr in females. ACTH independent Cushing’s had a SIR of 1.8/1,000,000/yr with a strong female predominance (9:1) (SIR females: 3.0/1,000,000/yr; males: 0.5/1,000,000/yr). The SIR of ectopic ACTH secreting tumours was 0.4/1,000,000/yr. Interestingly hypokalaemia was present at diagnosis in those patients who harboured malignant causes for their Cushing’s syndrome (ectopic ACTH secreting tumours or adrenocortical carcinomas) and had markedly elevated cortisol levels at baseline compared to the rest (P < 0.001). Mean cortisol post overnight dexamethasone suppression testwas 1714 nmol/l (± 692
Conclusion: Cushing’s syndrome is a rare disease. Although the numbers are small, we could still establish distinct characteristics in the different subtypes.