Treating pheochromocytoma: Our team approach
At Penn, you benefit from the experience and skill of an entire team. Every pheochromocytoma case goes before our tumor board, where experts from a range of fields come together and consider all options. Together, we create a personalized plan that balances the risks and benefits of treatment and considers your quality of life.
Care may involve:
For pheochromocytomas that release adrenaline or noradrenaline, we use medications to block the hormones before any medical procedure. It prevents them from interfering with blood pressure to make treatment safer.
Members of our team have deep experience with these blockades, successfully performing them on more than 400 people. We tailor the medication choice and dose to each case. While most people only need blockers short-term, others may need them longer, such as those with metastatic disease and numerous symptoms.
We always want to remove the diseased adrenal gland when we can — it stops the extra hormone release, relieves symptoms and may cure the cancer. We may also need to remove the thyroid gland. Because pheochromocytomas tend to grow slowly, neuroendocrine tumor surgery is an option for many people.
Our surgeons typically take a minimally invasive approach to adrenal removal, performing surgery through tiny incisions. This approach requires just an overnight hospital stay, and you recover more quickly than with traditional open surgery.
The one remaining adrenal gland is usually able to produce enough hormones for normal body functions. But in rare cases tied to some genetic mutations, people have tumors in both glands.
In those cases, our surgeons may consider leaving the cortex, the outer part of the adrenal gland. This cortical-sparing surgery can particularly help younger people avoid taking adrenal-replacement pills long-term.
Pheochromocytoma occasionally comes back years after treatment. It can reappear in the lymph nodes, bones, liver or lungs. In other cases, pheochromocytoma has already metastasized by the time of initial diagnosis.
In either situation, we can help. Typically, the disease still grows more slowly and acts less aggressively than other cancers, so our team can have a chance to weigh the options:
Surgery: We may recommend another tumor removal, especially if the disease is still limited to a few locations.
Watchful waiting: Because pheochromocytoma is so slow-growing, we may recommend waiting to see how the cancer continues to act before deciding on a treatment.
Ablation or radiation therapy: If metastases are confined to just a few small areas, we can use ablation (heat or cold therapy) to destroy tumors or radiation therapy to halt tumor growth.
Systemic therapy: We may eventually consider treatment aimed at all cancerous cells. While these therapies don’t always prompt a strong response and come with side effects, they can make a positive contribution. We carefully weigh the benefits and the downsides with you. We’re also careful to not use up options too soon. Many people eventually try multiple therapies, going months or years between treatments. Even with metastatic disease, many people enjoy a good quality of life for a long time. In addition to clinical trials, treatment may include:
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- Drug therapies: Injectable drugs that mimic hormones can relieve symptoms. Chemotherapy can also keep cancer in check, with newer, pill-based regimens that can feel less burdensome. And targeted therapy, a newer approach under development, aims at the ways cancer grows. Learn more about drug therapy.
- Nuclear medicine: We pair controlled radioactive particles with substances that certain pheochromocytomas take into their cells. Our program led the national trial for Azedra, the only approved nuclear medicine therapy for pheochromocytoma. Other options are under study.
People with pheochromocytomas require lifelong checkups with scans and blood or urine tests, even if they underwent successful surgery. Our team creates a personalized plan based on your circumstances.
Frequency and imaging choice are based on factors such as whether you have an inherited genetic variant (and which one). Many people with variants need a full-body, rapid MRI, a method we developed at our program.