TL;DR: The authors present an updated, practical approach to the diagnosis and treatment of hypoadrenalism in acutely ill patients, and summarizes the physiology of the corticosteroid response in acute illness.
Abstract: Recent studies report benefits from corticosteroid treatment in patients with septic shock. This review summarizes the physiology of the corticosteroid response in acute illness. The authors present an updated, practical approach to the diagnosis and treatment of hypoadrenalism in acutely ill patients. Supplemental corticosteroid treatment may be beneficial in many critical illnesses.
TL;DR: Imaging of adrenal glands, genetic tests, and biochemical analysis have been shown to contribute to early and correct diagnosis of primary non-autoimmune AD in the cases of hypoadrenalism with undetectable adrenal autoantibodies.
Abstract: Recent progress in the understanding of autoimmune adrenal disease, including a detailed analysis of a group of patients with Addison’s disease (AD), has been reviewed. Criteria for defining an autoimmune disease and the main features of autoimmune AD (history, prevalence, etiology, histopathology, clinical and laboratory findings, cell-mediated and humoral immunity, autoantigens and their autoepitopes, genetics, animal models, associated autoimmune diseases, pathogenesis, natural history, therapy) have been described. Furthermore, the autoimmune polyglandular syndromes (APS) associated with AD (revised classification, animal models, genetics, natural history) have been discussed. Of Italian patients with primary AD (n 317), 83% had autoimmune AD. At the onset, all patients with autoimmune AD (100%) had detectable adrenal cortex and/or steroid 21-hydroxylase autoantibodies. In the course of natural history of autoimmune AD, the presence of adrenal cortex and/or steroid 21-hydroxylase autoantibodies identified patients at risk to develop AD. Different risks of progression to clinical AD were found in children and adults, and three stages of subclinical hypoadrenalism have been defined. Normal or atrophic adrenal glands have been demonstrated by imaging in patients with clinical or subclinical AD. Autoimmune AD presented in four forms: as APS type 1 (13% of the patients), APS type 2 (41%), APS type 4 (5%), and isolated AD (41%). There were differences in genetics, age at onset, prevalence of adrenal cortex/21-hydroxylase autoantibodies, and associated autoimmune diseases in these groups. “Incomplete” forms of APS have been identified demonstrating that APS are more prevalent than previously reported. A varied prevalence of hypergonadotropic hypogonadism in patients with AD and value of steroid-producing cells autoantibodies reactive with steroid 17-hydroxylase or P450 side-chain cleavage enzyme as markers of this disease has been discussed. In addition, the prevalence, characteristic autoantigens, and autoantibodies of minor autoimmune diseases associated with AD have been described. Imaging of adrenal glands, genetic tests, and biochemical analysis have been shown to contribute to early and correct diagnosis of primary non-autoimmune AD in the cases of hypoadrenalism with undetectable adrenal autoantibodies. An original flow chart for the diagnosis of AD has been proposed. (Endocrine Reviews 23: 327–364, 2002)
TL;DR: Six infants with a neonatally lethal malformation syndrome of hypothalamic hamartoblastoma, postaxial polydactyly, and imperforate anus are reported on, postulated that this is a previously apparently unreported syndrome of presently unknown cause.
Abstract: We report on six infants with a neonatally lethal malformation syndrome of hypothalamic hamartoblastoma, postaxial polydactyly, and imperforate anus Some, but not all, patients had laryngeal cleft, abnormal lung lobulation, renal agenesis and/or renal dysplasia, short 4th metacarpals, nail dysplasia, multiple buccal frenula, hypoadrenalism, microphallus, congential heart defect, and intrauterine growth retardation The infants also had hypopituitarism and hypoadrenalism
All were sporadic cases, parents were not consanguineous, chromosomes were apparently normal Family histories were unremarkable There was insecticide and/or herbicide exposure in several of the cases, but no exposures were common to all 6 mothers Five of the patients were born within an 8-month period, but all in different geographic locations It is postulated that this is a previously apparently unreported syndrome of presently unknown cause
TL;DR: The results suggest that the R236G mutation may confer an inherited susceptibility to obesity through the production of an aberrant fusion protein that has the capacity to interfere with central melanocortin signalling.
Abstract: The functional loss of both alleles of the human pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) gene leads to a very rare syndrome of hypoadrenalism, red hair and early-onset obesity. In order to examine whether more subtle genetic variants in POMC might contribute to early-onset obesity, the coding region of the gene was sequenced in 262 Caucasian subjects with a history of severe obesity from childhood. Two children were found to be heterozygous for a missense mutation, R236G, which disrupts the dibasic cleavage site between beta melanocyte-stimulating hormone (beta-MSH) and beta-endorphin. Beta-TC3 cells transfected with the mutant POMC cDNA produced a mutant beta-MSH/beta-endorphin fusion protein. This fusion protein bound to the human melanocortin-4 receptor (hMC4R) with an affinity similar to its natural ligands, but had a markedly reduced ability to activate the receptor. This variant co-segregated with early-onset obesity over three generations in one family and was absent in 412 normal weight UK Caucasian controls. Combining the results in UK Caucasians with a new case-control study in French subjects and three previously published reports, mutations disrupting this processing site were present in 0.88% of subjects with early-onset obesity and 0.22% of normal-weight controls. These results suggest that the R236G mutation may confer an inherited susceptibility to obesity through the production of an aberrant fusion protein that has the capacity to interfere with central melanocortin signalling.
TL;DR: The objective to analyse the clinical and biochemical effects of metyrapone in the treatment of Cushing's syndrome and to propose a new drug candidate for this indication.
Abstract: Summary. objective To analyse the clinical and biochemical effects of metyrapone in the treatment of Cushing's syndrome.
design An evaluation of the standard clinical practice at one institution.
patients Ninety-one patients with Cushing's syndrome: 57 pituitary-dependent Cushing's disease, 10 adrenocortical adenomas, six adrenocortical carcinomas and 18 ectopic ACTH syndrome.
measurements
The acute response to metyrapone was assessed by measuring cortisol, 11-desoxycortisol and ACTH at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 hours after a test dose of 750 mg of metyrapone. The longer-term effect of metyrapone was judged by measuring serum cortisol at 0900, 1200, 1500, 1800, 2100 and sometimes 2400 h and calculating a mean.
results A test dose of 750 mg of metyrapone decreased serum cortisol levels within 2 hours In all groups of patients and this effect was sustained at 4 hours. At the same time, serum 11-desoxycortisol levels Increased in all patients, while plasma ACTH Increased In patients with pituitary Cushing's disease and the ectopic ACTH-syndrome. Fifty-three patients with Cushing's disease were followed on short-term metyrapone therapy (1 to 16 weeks) before other more definitive therapy. Their mean cortisol levels (median 654 nmol/l, range 408–2240) dropped to the target range of < 400 nmol/l in 40 patients (75%) on a median metyrapone dose of 2250 mg/day (range 750–6000). Metyrapone was given long term In 24 patients with Cushing's disease who had been given pituitary Irradiation, for a median of 27 months (range 3–140) with adequate control of hypercortisolaemia in 20 (83%). In 10 patients with adrenocortical adenomas and six with adrenocortical carcinomas, metyrapone in a median dose of 1750 mg/day (range 750–6000) reduced their mean cortisol levels (median 847 nmol/l, range 408–2000) to < 400 nmol/l in 13 patients (81%). In 18 patients with the ectopic ACTH-syndrome the ‘mean cortisol levels', obtained from five or six samples on the test day (median 1023 nmol/l, range 823–6354) were reduced to < 400 nmol/l In 13 patients (70%), on a median dose of 4000 mg/day (range 1000–6000). Reduction of cortisol levels was clearly associated with clinical and biochemical Improvement. The medication was well tolerated. Transient hypoadrenalism and hirsutism were unusual but were the most common side-effects.
conclusions In our experience metyrapone remains a most useful agent for controlling cortisol levels in the management of Cushing's syndrome of all types.