@article{RemdeKranzMorelletal.2023, author = {Remde, Hanna and Kranz, Stefanie and Morell, Sarah Maria and Altieri, Barbara and Kroiss, Matthias and Detomas, Mario and Fassnacht, Martin and Deutschbein, Timo}, title = {Clinical course of patients with adrenal incidentalomas and cortisol autonomy}, series = {Frontiers in Endocrinology}, volume = {14}, journal = {Frontiers in Endocrinology}, issn = {1664-2392}, doi = {10.3389/fendo.2023.1123132}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-316793}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Background Adrenal incidentalomas with cortisol autonomy are associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Specific data on the clinical and biochemical course of affected patients are lacking. Methods Retrospective study from a tertiary referral centre in Germany. After exclusion of overt hormone excess, malignancy and glucocorticoid medication, patients with adrenal incidentalomas were stratified according to serum cortisol after 1 mg dexamethasone: autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS), >5.0; possible ACS (PACS), 1.9-5.0; non-functioning adenomas (NFA), ≤1.8 µg/dl. Results A total of 260 patients were enrolled (147 women (56.5\%), median follow-up 8.8 (2.0-20.8) years). At initial diagnosis, median age was 59.5 (20-82) years, and median tumour size was 27 (10-116) mm. Bilateral tumours were more prevalent in ACS (30.0\%) and PACS (21.9\%) than in NFA (8.1\%). Over time, 40/124 (32.3\%) patients had a shift of their hormonal secretion pattern (NFA to PACS/ACS, n=15/53; PACS to ACS, n=6/47; ACS to PACS, n=11/24; PACS to NFA, n=8/47). However, none of the patients developed overt Cushing's syndrome. Sixty-one patients underwent adrenalectomy (NFA, 17.9\%; PACS, 24.0\%; ACS, 39.0\%). When non-operated patients with NFA were compared to PACS and ACS at last follow-up, arterial hypertension (65.3\% vs. 81.9\% and 92.0\%; p<0.05), diabetes (23.8\% vs. 35.6\% and 40.0\%; p<0.01), and thromboembolic events (PACS: HR 3.43, 95\%-CI 0.89-13.29; ACS: HR 5.96, 95\%-CI 1.33-26.63; p<0.05) were significantly less frequent, along with a trend towards a higher rate of cardiovascular events in case of cortisol autonomy (PACS: HR 2.23, 95\%-CI 0.94-5.32; ACS: HR 2.60, 95\%-CI 0.87-7.79; p=0.1). Twenty-five (12.6\%) of the non-operated patients died, with higher overall mortality in PACS (HR 2.6, 95\%-CI 1.0-4.7; p=0.083) and ACS (HR 4.7, 95\%-CI 1.6-13.3; p<0.005) compared to NFA. In operated patients, prevalence of arterial hypertension decreased significantly (77.0\% at diagnosis to 61.7\% at last follow-up; p<0.05). The prevalence of cardiovascular events and mortality did not differ significantly between operated and non-operated patients, whereas thromboembolic events were significantly less frequent in the surgical treatment group. Conclusion Our study confirms relevant cardiovascular morbidity in patients with adrenal incidentalomas (especially those with cortisol autonomy). These patients should therefore be monitored carefully, including adequate treatment of typical cardiovascular risk factors. Adrenalectomy was associated with a significantly decreased prevalence of hypertension. However, more than 30\% of patients required reclassification according to repeated dexamethasone suppression tests. Thus, cortisol autonomy should ideally be confirmed before making any relevant treatment decision (e.g. adrenalectomy).}, language = {en} } @article{PaulMiedenLeferingetal.2023, author = {Paul, Mila M. and Mieden, Hannah J. and Lefering, Rolf and Kupczyk, Eva K. and Jordan, Martin C. and Gilbert, Fabian and Meffert, Rainer H. and Sir{\´e}n, Anna-Leena and Hoelscher-Doht, Stefanie}, title = {Impact of a femoral fracture on outcome after traumatic brain injury — a matched-pair analysis of the TraumaRegister DGU\(^®\)}, series = {Journal of Clinical Medicine}, volume = {12}, journal = {Journal of Clinical Medicine}, number = {11}, issn = {2077-0383}, doi = {10.3390/jcm12113802}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-319363}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of death and disability in polytrauma and is often accompanied by concomitant injuries. We conducted a retrospective matched-pair analysis of data from a 10-year period from the multicenter database TraumaRegister DGU\(^®\) to analyze the impact of a concomitant femoral fracture on the outcome of TBI patients. A total of 4508 patients with moderate to critical TBI were included and matched by severity of TBI, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) risk classification, initial Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), age, and sex. Patients who suffered combined TBI and femoral fracture showed increased mortality and worse outcome at the time of discharge, a higher chance of multi-organ failure, and a rate of neurosurgical intervention. Especially those with moderate TBI showed enhanced in-hospital mortality when presenting with a concomitant femoral fracture (p = 0.037). The choice of fracture treatment (damage control orthopedics vs. early total care) did not impact mortality. In summary, patients with combined TBI and femoral fracture have higher mortality, more in-hospital complications, an increased need for neurosurgical intervention, and inferior outcome compared to patients with TBI solely. More investigations are needed to decipher the pathophysiological consequences of a long-bone fracture on the outcome after TBI.}, language = {en} } @article{GerhardtKordsmeyerSehneretal.2023, author = {Gerhardt, Louisa M. S. and Kordsmeyer, Maren and Sehner, Susanne and G{\"u}der, G{\"u}lmisal and St{\"o}rk, Stefan and Edelmann, Frank and Wachter, Rolf and Pankuweit, Sabine and Prettin, Christiane and Ertl, Georg and Wanner, Christoph and Angermann, Christiane E.}, title = {Prevalence and prognostic impact of chronic kidney disease and anaemia across ACC/AHA precursor and symptomatic heart failure stages}, series = {Clinical Research in Cardiology}, volume = {112}, journal = {Clinical Research in Cardiology}, number = {7}, doi = {10.1007/s00392-022-02027-w}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-323990}, pages = {868-879}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Background The importance of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and anaemia has not been comprehensively studied in asymptomatic patients at risk for heart failure (HF) versus those with symptomatic HF. We analysed the prevalence, characteristics and prognostic impact of both conditions across American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) precursor and HF stages A-D. Methods and results 2496 participants from three non-pharmacological German Competence Network HF studies were categorized by ACC/AHA stage; stage C patients were subdivided into C1 and C2 (corresponding to NYHA classes I/II and III, respectively). Overall, patient distribution was 8.1\%/35.3\%/32.9\% and 23.7\% in ACC/AHA stages A/B/C1 and C2/D, respectively. These subgroups were stratified by the absence ( - ) or presence ( +) of CKD (estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] < 60 mL/min/1.73m2) and anaemia (haemoglobin in women/men < 12/ < 13 g/dL). The primary outcome was all-cause mortality at 5-year follow-up. Prevalence increased across stages A/B/C1 and C2/D (CKD: 22.3\%/23.6\%/31.6\%/54.7\%; anaemia: 3.0\%/7.9\%/21.7\%/33.2\%, respectively), with concordant decreases in median eGFR and haemoglobin (all p < 0.001). Across all stages, hazard ratios [95\% confidence intervals] for all-cause mortality were 2.1 [1.8-2.6] for CKD + , 1.7 [1.4-2.0] for anaemia, and 3.6 [2.9-4.6] for CKD + /anaemia + (all p < 0.001). Population attributable fractions (PAFs) for 5-year mortality related to CKD and/or anaemia were similar across stages A/B, C1 and C2/D (up to 33.4\%, 30.8\% and 34.7\%, respectively). Conclusions Prevalence and severity of CKD and anaemia increased across ACC/AHA stages. Both conditions were individually and additively associated with increased 5-year mortality risk, with similar PAFs in asymptomatic patients and those with symptomatic HF.}, language = {en} }