Background: The feasibility, safety, and results of 108 laparoscopic anterior transperitoneal adrenalectomies (six bilateral) were evaluated in a series of 105 patients. Three patients with a preoperative diagnosis of primary adrenal carcinoma were excluded from the study.
Methods: A total of 102 patients were included in the study based on exhaustive endocrinological and imaging assessment. Twenty-nine patients with nonsecreting adenoma, 34 with aldosterone-producing adenoma, 27 with cortisol-producing adenoma (five bilateral), 13 with pheochromocytoma (one bilateral), two with androgen-secreting adenoma, and three with metastases were considered eligible for adrenalectomy. Lesion size ranged from 3.5 to 12 cm. Concurrent surgical procedures were performed in 10 patients (9.8%).
Results: One (0.9%) intraoperative complication, a colon tear in a bilateral adrenalectomy, required conversion. There were two (1.9%) postoperative complications: one patient with thrombocytopenia developed hemoperitoneum and required a second laparoscopic procedure, and an intraabdominal abscess was treated medically. Mean postoperative hospital stay was 2.5 days (range, 1-7 days). Postoperative mortality was 0.9%; the patient with the colon tear died of sepsis 60 days after the operation. At a mean follow-up of 30 months (range, 1-62), normalization or improvement in hormone levels was observed in all patients with secreting adenomas, and significant improvement or cure was achieved in all patients with hypertension.
Conclusion: Patients with secreting and nonsecreting adrenal lesions can be treated safety and effectively by laparoscopy with the anterior transperitoneal approach.