Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Coluna/Columna
Abstract
To report on a case of pheochromocytoma metastases to the spine occurring more than 20 years after initial diagnosis. A 34-year-old female with a history of metastatic pheochromocytoma diagnosed at age 12 presented with weakness, heart palpitations, and circumferential back pain of five months duration. The patient had undergone multiple laparotomies for abdominal and hepatic metastases. Work-up revealed a destructive lesion at T9. After two weeks of preoperative phenoxybenzamine to control her hypertension, she underwent decompression, posterior fixation and fusion. Surgical intervention was followed by radiation therapy, zoledronic acid, and only one cycle of chemotherapy due to intolerance of side effects. The patient survived 25 years after original diagnosis, which far exceeds the average survival of less than 15 years. The patient died 26 months postoperatively due to progression of disease. Pheochromocytoma with spine metastases occurring more than 20 years after diagnosis is very uncommon, and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a patient with a history of pheochromocytoma.
DOI
10.1590/S1808-18512010000300017
Publication Date
7-2010
Keywords
Case reports, diagnosis, differential, neoplasm metastasis, paraganglioma, pheochromocytoma/diagnosis, spinal cord compression, survivorship, thoracic vertebrae
ISSN
1808-1851
Recommended Citation
Scalfani M, Arnold PM, Anderson KK. Metastatic Adrenal Pheochromocytoma to the Thoracic Spine. Coluna/Columna. 2010; 9(3). doi: 10.1590/S1808-18512010000300017.