The main treatment for a pheochromocytoma is surgery to remove the tumor. Before you have surgery, your healthcare professional likely will prescribe certain blood pressure medicines. These medicines block high-adrenaline hormones to lower the risk of dangerously high blood pressure during surgery.
Preparing before surgery
You'll likely take medicines for 7 to 14 days before surgery to help lower blood pressure. These medicines will either replace or be added to other blood pressure medicines you take. You also may be told to eat a high-sodium diet.
Medicines such as alpha blockers, beta blockers and calcium channel blockers keep smaller veins and arteries open and relaxed. This improves blood flow and lowers blood pressure. Some of these medicines also may cause the heart to beat more slowly and with less force. This can lower blood pressure more.
Because these medicines widen the blood vessels, they cause the amount of fluid within the blood vessels to be low. This can cause dangerous drops in blood pressure when you stand up. A high-sodium diet can draw more fluid inside the blood vessels. This helps prevent low blood pressure during and after surgery.
Surgery
Most often, a surgeon makes a few small cuts called incisions in the stomach area. Wandlike devices equipped with video cameras and small tools are placed through the cuts to do the surgery. This is called laparoscopic surgery. Some surgeons do the procedure with robotic technology. They sit at a nearby console and control robotic arms, which hold a camera and surgery tools. If the tumor is very large, surgery that involves a larger incision and opening the abdominal cavity may be needed.
Often, the surgeon removes the entire adrenal gland that has the pheochromocytoma. But the surgeon might remove only the tumor, leaving some healthy adrenal gland tissue. This may be done when the other adrenal gland also has been removed. Or it may be done when there are tumors in both adrenal glands.
If a tumor is cancer, and the cancer has spread to other organs, surgery may not be able to remove all of the cancer tissue. Removing as much of the tumor as possible along with medical therapy might ease pheochromocytoma symptoms. It also makes blood pressure easier to control.
After surgery
If one healthy adrenal gland remains, it can carry out the functions usually done by two glands. Blood pressure usually returns to a healthy range after surgery. You'll need regular checkups with your healthcare professional for the rest of your life. These appointments help track your health, find other health concerns and check to see if the tumor has come back. If both adrenal glands are removed, you’ll need to take steroid medicines for the rest of your life. These medicines replace certain hormones that the adrenal glands make.
Cancer treatments
Very few pheochromocytomas are cancer. Because of this, research about the best treatments is limited. Treatments for cancerous tumors and cancer that has spread in the body, related to a pheochromocytoma, may include:
- Targeted therapies. These use a medicine combined with a radioactive substance that seeks out cancer cells and kills them.
- Chemotherapy. This treatment uses powerful drugs that kill fast-growing cancer cells. It may help ease symptoms in people with pheochromocytomas whose cancer has spread.
- Radiation therapy. This treatment uses beams of intense energy to kill cancer cells. It may relieve symptoms of tumors that have spread to the bone and cause pain.
- Ablation. This treatment can destroy cancer tumors with freezing temperatures, high-energy radio waves or ethanol alcohol.