Journal of Minimal Access Surgery (Jan 2021)

Ganglioneuroma presenting as an adrenal incidentaloma: Feasibility of adrenal-sparing surgery

  • Rohit Ranjan,
  • Ankur Mittal,
  • Satish Kumar Ranjan,
  • Vikas Panwar,
  • Harkirat Singh Talwar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jmas.JMAS_147_20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
pp. 389 – 391

Abstract

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Adrenal ganglioneuromas (GNs) are very rare tumours that originate from neural crest cells. Most of the time, they are diagnosed incidentally as they are usually non-functional and remain asymptomatic. Nowadays, they are being detected more often due to better availability of imaging facilities such as computed tomography (CT)/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Minimally invasive adrenalectomy (laparoscopic or robotic) remains the standard of care for such lesions. Hereby, we report a case of a 15-year-old young girl with right adrenal incidentaloma which was diagnosed on CT with the features suggestive of GN. She underwent robot-assisted excision of the mass with adrenal-sparing surgery. Histopathology revealed benign GN and no adjuvant treatment was required. As GN is not known for recurrence or metastasis, minimal invasive adrenal-sparing surgery should be a preferred modality of choice.

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