Publication

Impact of diagnosis and targeted interventions on the quality of life and neuropsychiatric outcomes of patients with adrenal tumours: a systematic review.

Ruggiero, Barbara
Zhu, Giuliana
Swan, Liam
Suntornlohanakul, Onnicha
Xu, Mengjie
Ronchi, Cristina L
Elhassan, Yasir S
Yates, Derick
Prete, Alessandro
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To systematically evaluate the impact of adrenal tumour diagnosis and targeted interventions on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and neuropsychiatric outcomes across tumour subtypes. DESIGN: Systematic review. METHODS: A literature search of MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Library, and CINAHL (January 1990-March 2026) identified studies reporting HRQoL and neuropsychiatric outcomes in adults with adrenal tumours, including non-functioning adrenal tumours (NFAT), mild autonomous cortisol secretion (MACS), adrenal Cushing's syndrome (CS), primary aldosteronism (PA), phaeochromocytoma/paraganglioma (PPGL), and adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC). Study quality was assessed using CONSORT-PRO and Newcastle-Ottawa criteria. Due to methodological heterogeneity, findings were synthesised narratively. RESULTS: A total of 117 studies involving 35,361 patients were included. CONSORT-PRO quality was good but heterogeneous, whereas observational study quality was mostly moderate or low. Across tumour subtypes, adrenal tumours were consistently associated with impaired HRQoL and neuropsychiatric outcomes. A gradient of burden was evident, with mild impairment in NFAT, intermediate impairment in MACS and PA, and the most pronounced and persistent deficits in adrenal CS, PPGL, and ACC. Targeted interventions were often associated with improved patient-reported outcomes, though the magnitude and consistency of benefit varied across tumour subtypes and study design. Recovery was frequently incomplete. Most studies relied on generic HRQoL instruments, and no disease-specific neuropsychiatric tools were identified. CONCLUSIONS: Adrenal tumours are associated with substantial and often persistent impairment in patient wellbeing across tumour subtypes. Although treatment generally improves outcomes, residual symptoms are common, underscoring the need for long-term, patient-centred care and for the development of adrenal tumour-specific patient-reported outcome measures.
MIDER Authors
Citations
Google Scholar:
Altmetric:
Date
2026-04-21
Type
Article
Subject
Adrenal Gland Neoplasms, Phaeochromocytoma
Citation
Ruggiero B, Zhu G, Swan L, Suntornlohanakul O, Xu M, Ronchi CL, Elhassan YS, Yates D, Prete A. Impact of diagnosis and targeted interventions on the quality of life and neuropsychiatric outcomes of patients with adrenal tumours: a systematic review. Eur J Endocrinol. 2026 Apr 21:lvag072. doi: 10.1093/ejendo/lvag072.
Journal / Source Title
European Journal of Endocrinology
DOI
10.1093/ejendo/lvag072
PMID
42011921
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publisher’s URL
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42011921/
Publisher’s statement
Note / Copyright