|
Adrenocorticosteroids
The adrenal cortex releases a
large number of steroids into the circulation. Some have minimal biologic
activity and function primarily as precursors, and there are some for
which no function has been established. The hormonal steroids may be
classified as those having important effects on intermediary metabolism
and immune function (glucocorticoids), those having principally
salt-retaining activity (mineralocorticoids), and those having androgenic
or estrogenic activity (see Chapter 40). In humans, the major
glucocorticoid is cortisol and the most important
mineralocorticoid is aldosterone. Quantitatively, dehydroepiandrosterone
(DHEA) in its sulfated form (DHEAS) is the major adrenal androgen, since
about 20 mg is secreted daily. However, DHEA and two other adrenal
androgens, androstenediol and androstenedione, are weak androgens or (by
conversion) estrogens. Adrenal androgens constitute the major endogenous
precursors of estrogen in women after menopause and in younger patients
in whom ovarian function is deficient or absent.
The Naturally Occurring
Glucocorticoids; Cortisol (Hydrocortisone)
Pharmacokinetics
Cortisol (also called
hydrocortisone, compound F) exerts a wide range of physiologic effects,
including regulation of intermediary metabolism, cardiovascular function,
growth, and immunity. Its synthesis and secretion are tightly regulated
by the central nervous system, which is very sensitive to negative
feedback by the circulating cortisol and exogenous (synthetic)
glucocorticoids. Cortisol is synthesized from cholesterol (as shown in
Figure 39–1). The mechanisms controlling its secretion are discussed in
Chapter 37.
In the normal adult, in the absence of stress, 10–20
mg of cortisol is secreted daily. The rate of secretion follows a
circadian rhythm governed by pulses of ACTH that peak in the early
morning hours and after meals (Figure 39–2). In plasma, cortisol is bound
to circulating proteins. Corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG), an 2 globulin synthesized by
the liver, binds about 90% of the circulating hormone under normal circumstances.
The remainder is free (about 5–10%) or loosely bound to albumin (about
5%) and is available to exert its effect on target cells. When plasma
cortisol levels exceed 20–30 mcg/dL, CBG is saturated, and the
concentration of free cortisol rises rapidly. CBG is increased in
pregnancy and with estrogen administration and in hyperthyroidism. It is
decreased by hypothyroidism, genetic defects in synthesis, and protein
deficiency states. Albumin has a large capacity but low affinity for
cortisol, and for practical purposes albumin-bound cortisol should be
considered free. Synthetic corticosteroids such as dexamethasone are
largely bound to albumin rather than CBG.
The half-life of cortisol in the circulation is
normally about 60–90 minutes; it may be increased when hydrocortisone
(the pharmaceutical preparation of cortisol) is administered in large
amounts or when stress, hypothyroidism, or liver disease is present. Only
1% of cortisol is excreted unchanged in the urine as free cortisol; about
20% of cortisol is converted to cortisone by 11-hydroxysteroid
dehydrogenase in the kidney and other tissues with mineralocorticoid
receptors (see below) before reaching the liver. Most cortisol is
metabolized in the liver. About one third of the cortisol produced daily
is excreted in the urine as dihydroxy ketone metabolites and is measured
as 17-hydroxysteroids (see Figure 39–3 for carbon numbering). Many
cortisol metabolites are conjugated with glucuronic acid or sulfate at
the C3 and C21 hydroxyls, respectively, in the
liver; they are then excreted in the urine.
In some species (eg, the rat),
corticosterone is the major glucocorticoid. It is less firmly bound to
protein and therefore metabolized more rapidly. The pathways of its
degradation are similar to those of cortisol.
Pharmacodynamics
Mechanism of Action
Most of the known effects of the
glucocorticoids are mediated by widely distributed glucocorticoid
receptors. These proteins are members of the superfamily of nuclear receptors,
which includes steroid, sterol (vitamin D), thyroid, retinoic acid, and
many other receptors with unknown or nonexistent ligands (orphan
receptors). All these receptors interact with the promoters of—and
regulate the transcription of—target genes (Figure 39–4). In the absence
of the hormonal ligand, glucocorticoid receptors are primarily
cytoplasmic, in oligomeric complexes with heat shock proteins (Hsp). The
most important of these are two molecules of Hsp90, although other
proteins are certainly involved. Free hormone from the plasma and
interstitial fluid enters the cell and binds to the receptor, inducing
conformational changes that allow it to dissociate from the heat shock
proteins. The ligand-bound receptor complex then is actively transported
into the nucleus, where it interacts with DNA and nuclear proteins. As a
homodimer, it binds to glucocorticoid receptor elements (GRE) in
the promoters of responsive genes. The GRE is composed of two palindromic
sequences that bind to the hormone receptor dimer.
In addition to binding to GREs,
the ligand-bound receptor also forms complexes with and influences the function
of other transcription factors, such as AP1 and NF- B, which act on non–GRE-containing
promoters, to contribute to the regulation of transcription of their
responsive genes. These transcription factors have broad actions on the
regulation of growth factors, proinflammatory cytokines, etc, and to a
great extent mediate the anti-growth, anti-inflammatory, and
immunosuppressive effects of glucocorticoids.
Two genes for the corticoid
receptor have been identified: one encoding the classic glucocorticoid
receptor and the other encoding the mineralocorticoid receptor.
Alternative splicing of human glucocorticoid receptor pre-mRNA generates
two highly homologous isoforms, termed hGR alpha and hGR beta. hGR alpha
is the classic ligand-activated glucocorticoid receptor which, in the
hormone-bound state, modulates the expression of
glucocorticoid-responsive genes. In contrast, hGR beta does not bind
glucocorticoids and is transcriptionally inactive. However, hGR beta is
able to inhibit the effects of hormone-activated hGR alpha on
glucocorticoid-responsive genes, playing the role of a physiologically
relevant endogenous inhibitor of glucocorticoid action.
The glucocorticoid receptor is
composed of about 800 amino acids and can be divided into three
functional domains (see Figure 2–6). The glucocorticoid-binding domain is
located at the carboxyl terminal of the molecule. The DNA-binding domain
is located in the middle of the protein and contains nine cysteine
residues. This region folds into a "two-finger" structure
stabilized by zinc ions connected to cysteines to form two tetrahedrons.
This part of the molecule binds to the GREs that regulate glucocorticoid
action on glucocorticoid-regulated genes. The zinc fingers represent the
basic structure by which the DNA-binding domain recognizes specific
nucleic acid sequences. The amino-terminal domain is involved in the
transactivation activity of the receptor and increases its specificity.
The interaction of
glucocorticoid receptors with GREs or other transcription factors is
facilitated or inhibited by several families of proteins called steroid
receptor coregulators, divided into coactivators and corepressors.
The coregulators do this by serving as bridges between the receptors and
other nuclear proteins and by expressing enzymatic activities such as
histone acetylase or deacetylase, which alter the conformation of
nucleosomes and the transcribability of genes.
Between 10% and 20% of expressed
genes in a cell are regulated by glucocorticoids. The number and affinity
of receptors for the hormone, the complement of transcription factors and
coregulators, and post-transcription events determine the relative specificity
of these hormones' actions in various cells. The effects of
glucocorticoids are mainly due to proteins synthesized from mRNA
transcribed from their target genes.
Some of the effects of
glucocorticoids can be attributed to their binding to aldosterone receptors
(ARs). Indeed, ARs bind aldosterone and cortisol with similar affinity. A
mineralocorticoid effect of cortisol is avoided in some tissues by
expression of 11 -hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2,
the enzyme responsible for biotransformation to its 11-keto derivative
(cortisone), which has minimal affinity for aldosterone receptors.
Prompt effects such as initial
feedback suppression of pituitary ACTH occur in minutes and are too rapid
to be explained on the basis of gene transcription and protein synthesis.
It is not known how these effects are mediated. Among the proposed
mechanisms are direct effects on cell membrane receptors for the hormone
or nongenomic effects of the classic hormone-bound glucocorticoid
receptor. The putative membrane receptors might be entirely different
from the known intracellular receptors.
Physiologic Effects
The glucocorticoids have
widespread effects because they influence the function of most cells in
the body. The major metabolic consequences of glucocorticoid secretion or
administration are due to direct actions of these hormones in the cell.
However, some important effects are the result of homeostatic responses
by insulin and glucagon. Although many of the effects of glucocorticoids
are dose-related and become magnified when large amounts are administered
for therapeutic purposes, there are also other effects—called permissive
effects—without which many normal functions become deficient. For
example, the response of vascular and bronchial smooth muscle to
catecholamines is diminished in the absence of cortisol and restored by
physiologic amounts of this glucocorticoid. Similarly, the lipolytic
responses of fat cells to catecholamines, ACTH, and growth hormone are
attenuated in the absence of glucocorticoids.
Metabolic Effects
The glucocorticoids have
important dose-related effects on carbohydrate, protein, and fat
metabolism. The same effects are responsible for some of the serious
adverse effects associated with their use in therapeutic doses.
Glucocorticoids stimulate and are required for gluconeogenesis and
glycogen synthesis in the fasting state. They stimulate
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and glycogen
synthase and the release of amino acids in the course of muscle
catabolism.
Glucocorticoids increase serum
glucose levels and thus stimulate insulin release and inhibit the uptake
of glucose by muscle cells, while they stimulate hormone sensitive lipase
and thus lipolysis. The increased insulin secretion stimulates
lipogenesis and to a lesser degree inhibits lipolysis, leading to a net
increase in fat deposition combined with increased release of fatty acids
and glycerol into the circulation.
The net results of these actions
are most apparent in the fasting state, when the supply of glucose from
gluconeogenesis, the release of amino acids from muscle catabolism, the
inhibition of peripheral glucose uptake, and the stimulation of lipolysis
all contribute to maintenance of an adequate glucose supply to the brain.
Catabolic and Antianabolic
Effects
Although glucocorticoids
stimulate RNA and protein synthesis in the liver, they have catabolic and
antianabolic effects in lymphoid and connective tissue, muscle,
peripheral fat, and skin. Supraphysiologic amounts of glucocorticoids
lead to decreased muscle mass and weakness and thinning of the skin.
Catabolic and antianabolic effects on bone are the cause of osteoporosis
in Cushing's syndrome and impose a major limitation in the long-term
therapeutic use of glucocorticoids. In children, glucocorticoids reduce
growth. This effect may be partially prevented by administration of
growth hormone in high doses.
Anti-Inflammatory and
Immunosuppressive Effects
Glucocorticoids dramatically
reduce the manifestations of inflammation. This is due to their profound
effects on the concentration, distribution, and function of peripheral
leukocytes and to their suppressive effects on the inflammatory cytokines
and chemokines and on other mediators of inflammation. Inflammation,
regardless of its cause, is characterized by the extravasation and
infiltration of leukocytes into the affected tissue. These events are
mediated by a complex series of interactions of white cell adhesion
molecules with those on endothelial cells and are inhibited by
glucocorticoids. After a single dose of a short-acting glucocorticoid,
the concentration of neutrophils in the circulation increases while the
lymphocytes (T and B cells), monocytes, eosinophils, and basophils
decrease. The changes are maximal at 6 hours and are dissipated in 24
hours. The increase in neutrophils is due both to the increased influx
into the blood from the bone marrow and to the decreased migration from
the blood vessels, leading to a reduction in the number of cells at the
site of inflammation. The reduction in circulating lymphocytes,
monocytes, eosinophils, and basophils is primarily the result of their
movement from the vascular bed to lymphoid tissue.
Glucocorticoids also inhibit the
functions of tissue macrophages and other antigen-presenting cells. The
ability of these cells to respond to antigens and mitogens is reduced.
The effect on macrophages is particularly marked and limits their ability
to phagocytose and kill microorganisms and to produce tumor necrosis
factor- , interleukin-1, metalloproteinases,
and plasminogen activator. Both macrophages and lymphocytes produce less
interleukin-12 and interferon- , important inducers of TH1 cell activity, and cellular immunity.
In addition to their effects on
leukocyte function, glucocorticoids influence the inflammatory response
by reducing the prostaglandin, leukotriene, and platelet-activating
factor synthesis that results from activation of phospholipase A2.
Finally, glucocorticoids reduce expression of cyclooxygenase-2, the
inducible form of this enzyme, in inflammatory cells, thus reducing the
amount of enzyme available to produce prostaglandins (see Chapters 18 and
36).
Glucocorticoids cause
vasoconstriction when applied directly to the skin, possibly by
suppressing mast cell degranulation. They also decrease capillary
permeability by reducing the amount of histamine released by basophils
and mast cells.
The anti-inflammatory and
immunosuppressive effects of glucocorticoids are largely due to the
actions described above. In humans, complement activation is unaltered,
but its effects are inhibited. Antibody production can be reduced by
large doses of steroids, although it is unaffected by moderate doses (eg,
20 mg/d of prednisone).
The anti-inflammatory and
immunosuppressive effects of these agents are widely useful
therapeutically but are also responsible for some of their most serious
adverse effects (see text that follows).
Other Effects
Glucocorticoids have important
effects on the nervous system. Adrenal insufficiency causes marked
slowing of the alpha rhythm of the electroencephalogram and is associated
with depression. Increased amounts of glucocorticoids often produce
behavioral disturbances in humans: initially insomnia and euphoria and
subsequently depression. Large doses of glucocorticoids may increase
intracranial pressure (pseudotumor cerebri).
Glucocorticoids given
chronically suppress the pituitary release of ACTH, growth hormone,
thyroid-stimulating hormone, and luteinizing hormone.
Large doses of glucocorticoids
have been associated with the development of peptic ulcer, possibly by
suppressing the local immune response against Helicobacter pylori.
They also promote fat redistribution in the body, with increase of
visceral, facial, nuchal, and supraclavicular fat, and they appear to
antagonize the effect of vitamin D on calcium absorption. The
glucocorticoids also have important effects on the hematopoietic system.
In addition to their effects on leukocytes, they increase the number of
platelets and red blood cells.
Cortisol deficiency results in
impaired renal function (particularly glomerular filtration), augmented
vasopressin secretion, and diminished ability to excrete a water load.
Glucocorticoids have important
effects on the development of the fetal lungs. Indeed, the structural and
functional changes in the lungs near term, including the production of
pulmonary surface-active material required for air breathing
(surfactant), are stimulated by glucocorticoids.
Synthetic Corticosteroids
Glucocorticoids have become
important agents for use in the treatment of many inflammatory,
immunologic, hematologic, and other disorders. This has stimulated the
development of many synthetic steroids with anti-inflammatory and
immunosuppressive activity.
Pharmacokinetics
Source
Pharmaceutical steroids are
usually synthesized from cholic acid obtained from cattle or steroid
sapogenins found in plants. Further modifications of these steroids have
led to the marketing of a large group of synthetic steroids with special
characteristics that are pharmacologically and therapeutically important
(Table 39–1; Figure 39–3).
|
Table 39–1 Some Commonly Used
Natural and Synthetic Corticosteroids for General Use.
|
|
|
|
Activity1
|
|
|
|
Agent
|
Anti-Inflammatory
|
Topical
|
Salt-Retaining
|
Equivalent
Oral Dose (mg)
|
Forms
Available
|
|
Short- to
medium-acting glucocorticoids
|
|
Hydrocortisone
(cortisol)
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
20
|
Oral,
injectable, topical
|
|
Cortisone
|
0.8
|
0
|
0.8
|
25
|
Oral
|
|
Prednisone
|
4
|
0
|
0.3
|
5
|
Oral
|
|
Prednisolone
|
5
|
4
|
0.3
|
5
|
Oral,
injectable
|
|
Methylprednisolone
|
5
|
5
|
0.25
|
4
|
Oral,
injectable
|
|
Meprednisone2
|
5
|
|
0
|
4
|
Oral,
injectable
|
|
Intermediate-acting
glucocorticoids
|
|
Triamcinolone
|
5
|
53
|
0
|
4
|
Oral,
injectable, topical
|
|
Paramethasone2
|
10
|
|
0
|
2
|
Oral,
injectable
|
|
Fluprednisolone2
|
15
|
7
|
0
|
1.5
|
Oral
|
|
Long-acting
glucocorticoids
|
|
Betamethasone
|
25–40
|
10
|
0
|
0.6
|
Oral,
injectable, topical
|
|
Dexamethasone
|
30
|
10
|
0
|
0.75
|
Oral,
injectable, topical
|
|
Mineralocorticoids
|
|
Fludrocortisone
|
10
|
0
|
250
|
2
|
Oral
|
|
Desoxycorticosterone
acetate2
|
0
|
0
|
20
|
|
Injectable,
pellets
|
|
|
1Potency relative to hydrocortisone.
2Outside USA.
3Acetonide: Up to 100.
|
Disposition
The metabolism of the naturally
occurring adrenal steroids has been discussed above. The synthetic
corticosteroids (Table 39–1) are in most cases rapidly and completely
absorbed when given by mouth. Although they are transported and
metabolized in a fashion similar to that of the endogenous steroids,
important differences exist.
Alterations in the
glucocorticoid molecule influence its affinity for glucocorticoid and
mineralocorticoid receptors as well as its protein-binding affinity, side
chain stability, rate of elimination, and metabolic products.
Halogenation at the 9 position, unsaturation of the 1–2 bond of the A ring, and methylation
at the 2 or 16 position prolong the half-life by more than 50%. The 1 compounds are excreted in the free
form. In some cases, the agent given is a prodrug; for example,
prednisone is rapidly converted to the active product prednisolone in the
body.
Pharmacodynamics
The actions of the synthetic
steroids are similar to those of cortisol (see above). They bind to the
specific intracellular receptor proteins and produce the same effects but
have different ratios of glucocorticoid to mineralocorticoid potency
(Table 39–1).
Clinical Pharmacology
Diagnosis and Treatment of
Disturbed Adrenal Function
Adrenocortical Insufficiency
Chronic
(Addison's Disease)
Chronic adrenocortical
insufficiency is characterized by weakness, fatigue, weight loss,
hypotension, hyperpigmentation, and inability to maintain the blood glucose
level during fasting. In such individuals, minor noxious, traumatic, or
infectious stimuli may produce acute adrenal insufficiency with
circulatory shock and even death.
In primary adrenal
insufficiency, about 20–30 mg of hydrocortisone must be given daily, with
increased amounts during periods of stress. Although hydrocortisone has
some mineralocorticoid activity, this must be supplemented by an
appropriate amount of a salt-retaining hormone such as fludrocortisone.
Synthetic glucocorticoids that are long-acting and devoid of
salt-retaining activity should not be administered to these patients.
Acute
When acute adrenocortical
insufficiency is suspected, treatment must be instituted immediately.
Therapy consists of large amounts of parenteral hydrocortisone in
addition to correction of fluid and electrolyte abnormalities and
treatment of precipitating factors.
Hydrocortisone sodium succinate
or phosphate in doses of 100 mg intravenously is given every 8 hours
until the patient is stable. The dose is then gradually reduced,
achieving maintenance dosage within 5 days.
The administration of
salt-retaining hormone is resumed when the total hydrocortisone dosage
has been reduced to 50 mg/d.
Adrenocortical Hypo- and
Hyperfunction
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
This group of disorders is
characterized by specific defects in the synthesis of cortisol. In
pregnancies at high risk for congenital adrenal hyperplasia, fetuses can
be protected from genital abnormalities by administration of
dexamethasone to the mother. The most common defect is a decrease in or
lack of P450c21 (21 -hydroxylase) activity.*
As can be seen in Figure 39–1,
this would lead to a reduction in cortisol synthesis and thus produce a
compensatory increase in ACTH release. The gland becomes hyperplastic and
produces abnormally large amounts of precursors such as
17-hydroxyprogesterone that can be diverted to the androgen pathway,
leading to virilization. Metabolism of this compound in the liver leads
to pregnanetriol, which is characteristically excreted into the urine in
large amounts in this disorder and can be used to make the diagnosis and
to monitor efficacy of glucocorticoid substitution. However, the most
reliable method of detecting this disorder is the increased response of
plasma 17-hydroxyprogesterone to ACTH stimulation.
If the defect is in
11-hydroxylation, large amounts of deoxycorticosterone are produced, and
because this steroid has mineralocorticoid activity, hypertension with or
without hypokalemic alkalosis ensues. When 17-hydroxylation is defective
in the adrenals and gonads, hypogonadism is also present. However,
increased amounts of 11-deoxycorticosterone are formed, and the signs and
symptoms associated with mineralocorticoid excess—such as hypertension
and hypokalemia—are also observed.
When first seen, the infant with
congenital adrenal hyperplasia may be in acute adrenal crisis and should
be treated as described above, using appropriate electrolyte solutions
and an intravenous preparation of hydrocortisone in stress doses.
Once the patient is stabilized,
oral hydrocortisone, 12–18 mg/m2/d in two unequally divided
doses (two thirds in the morning, one third in late afternoon) is begun.
The dosage is adjusted to allow normal growth and bone maturation and to
prevent androgen excess. Alternate-day therapy with prednisone has also
been used to achieve greater ACTH suppression without increasing growth
inhibition. Fludrocortisone, 0.05–0.2 mg/d, should also be administered
by mouth, with added salt to maintain normal blood pressure, plasma renin
activity, and electrolytes.
*Names for the adrenal steroid
synthetic enzymes include the following:P450c11 (11-hydroxylase)P450c17
(17-hydroxylase)P450c21 (21-hydroxylase)
Cushing's Syndrome
Cushing's syndrome is usually
the result of bilateral adrenal hyperplasia secondary to an
ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma (Cushing's disease) but occasionally is
due to tumors or nodular hyperplasia of the adrenal gland or ectopic
production of ACTH by other tumors. The manifestations are those
associated with the chronic presence of excessive glucocorticoids. When
glucocorticoid hypersecretion is marked and prolonged, a rounded,
plethoric face and trunk obesity are striking in appearance. The
manifestations of protein loss are often found and include muscle
wasting; thinning, purple striae, and easy bruising of the skin; poor
wound healing; and osteoporosis. Other serious disturbances include
mental disorders, hypertension, and diabetes. This disorder is treated by
surgical removal of the tumor producing ACTH or cortisol, irradiation of
the pituitary tumor, or resection of one or both adrenals. These patients
must receive large doses of cortisol during and after the surgical
procedure. Doses of up to 300 mg of soluble hydrocortisone may be given
as a continuous intravenous infusion on the day of surgery. The dose must
be reduced slowly to normal replacement levels, since rapid reduction in
dose may produce withdrawal symptoms, including fever and joint pain. If
adrenalectomy has been performed, long-term maintenance is similar to
that outlined above for adrenal insufficiency.
Aldosteronism
Primary aldosteronism usually
results from the excessive production of aldosterone by an adrenal
adenoma. However, it may also result from abnormal secretion by
hyperplastic glands or from a malignant tumor. The clinical findings of
hypertension, weakness, and tetany are related to the continued renal
loss of potassium, which leads to hypokalemia, alkalosis, and elevation
of serum sodium concentrations. This syndrome can also be produced in
disorders of adrenal steroid biosynthesis by excessive secretion of
deoxycorticosterone, corticosterone, or 18-hydroxycorticosterone—all compounds
with inherent mineralocorticoid activity.
In contrast to patients with
secondary aldosteronism (see text that follows), these patients have low
(suppressed) levels of plasma renin activity and angiotensin II. When
treated with fludrocortisone (0.2 mg twice daily orally for 3 days) or
deoxycorticosterone acetate (20 mg/d intramuscularly for 3 days—but not
available in the USA), patients fail to retain sodium and the secretion
of aldosterone is not significantly reduced. When the disorder is mild, it
may escape detection if serum potassium levels are used for screening.
However, it may be detected by an increased ratio of plasma aldosterone
to renin. Patients generally improve when treated with spironolactone, an
aldosterone receptor-blocking agent, and the response to this agent is of
diagnostic and therapeutic value.
Use of Glucocorticoids for
Diagnostic Purposes
It is sometimes necessary to
suppress the production of ACTH to identify the source of a particular
hormone or to establish whether its production is influenced by the
secretion of ACTH. In these circumstances, it is advantageous to use a
very potent substance such as dexamethasone because the use of small
quantities reduces the possibility of confusion in the interpretation of
hormone assays in blood or urine. For example, if complete suppression is
achieved by the use of 50 mg of cortisol, the urinary
17-hydroxycorticosteroids will be 15–18 mg/24 h, since one third of the
dose given will be recovered in urine as 17-hydroxycorticosteroid. If an
equivalent dose of 1.5 mg of dexamethasone is used, the urinary excretion
will be only 0.5 mg/24 h and blood levels will be low.
The dexamethasone suppression
test is used for the diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome and has
also been used in the differential diagnosis of depressive psychiatric
states. As a screening test, 1 mg dexamethasone is given orally at 11 PM, and a plasma sample is obtained the
following morning. In normal individuals, the morning cortisol
concentration is usually less than 3 mcg/dL, whereas in Cushing's
syndrome the level is usually greater than 5 mcg/dL. The results are not
reliable in the patient with depression, anxiety, concurrent illness, and
other stressful conditions or in the patient who is receiving a
medication that enhances the catabolism of dexamethasone in the liver. To
distinguish between hypercortisolism due to anxiety, depression, and
alcoholism (pseudo-Cushing syndrome) and bona fide Cushing's syndrome, a
combined test is carried out, consisting of dexamethasone (0.5 mg orally
every 6 hours for 2 days) followed by a standard corticotropin-releasing
hormone (CRH) test (1 mg/kg given as a bolus intravenous infusion 2 hours
after the last dose of dexamethasone).
In patients in whom the
diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome has been established clinically and
confirmed by a finding of elevated free cortisol in the urine,
suppression with large doses of dexamethasone will help to distinguish
patients with Cushing's disease from those with steroid-producing tumors
of the adrenal cortex or with the ectopic ACTH syndrome. Dexamethasone is
given in a dosage of 0.5 mg orally every 6 hours for 2 days, followed by
2 mg orally every 6 hours for 2 days, and the urine is then assayed for
cortisol or its metabolites (Liddle's test); or dexamethasone is given as
a single dose of 8 mg at 11 PM, and
the plasma cortisol is measured at 8 AM the
following day. In patients with Cushing's disease, the suppressant effect
of dexamethasone usually produces a 50% reduction in hormone levels. In patients
in whom suppression does not occur, the ACTH level will be low in the
presence of a cortisol-producing adrenal tumor and elevated in patients
with an ectopic ACTH-producing tumor.
Corticosteroids and Stimulation
of Lung Maturation in the Fetus
Lung maturation in the fetus is
regulated by the fetal secretion of cortisol. Treatment of the mother
with large doses of glucocorticoid reduces the incidence of respiratory
distress syndrome in infants delivered prematurely. When delivery is
anticipated before 34 weeks of gestation, intramuscular betamethasone, 12
mg, followed by an additional dose of 12 mg 18–24 hours later, is
commonly used. Betamethasone is chosen because maternal protein binding
and placental metabolism of this corticosteroid is less than that of
cortisol, allowing increased transfer across the placenta to the fetus.
Corticosteroids and Nonadrenal
Disorders
The synthetic analogs of
cortisol are useful in the treatment of a diverse group of diseases unrelated
to any known disturbance of adrenal function (Table 39–2). The usefulness
of corticosteroids in these disorders is a function of their ability to
suppress inflammatory and immune responses and to alter leukocyte
function, as previously described and as described in Chapter 55. These
agents are useful in disorders in which host response is the cause of the
major manifestations of the disease. In instances in which the
inflammatory or immune response is important in controlling the
pathologic process, therapy with corticosteroids may be dangerous but
justified to prevent irreparable damage from an inflammatory response—if
used in conjunction with specific therapy for the disease process.
|
Table 39–2 Some Therapeutic
Indications for the Use of Glucocorticoids in Nonadrenal Disorders.
|
|
|
Disorder
|
Examples
|
|
Allergic
reactions
|
Angioneurotic
edema, asthma, bee stings, contact dermatitis, drug reactions,
allergic rhinitis, serum sickness, urticaria
|
|
Collagen-vascular
disorders
|
Giant cell
arteritis, lupus erythematosus, mixed connective tissue syndromes,
polymyositis, polymyalgia rheumatica, rheumatoid arthritis, temporal
arteritis
|
|
Eye
diseases
|
Acute
uveitis, allergic conjunctivitis, choroiditis, optic neuritis
|
|
Gastrointestinal
diseases
|
Inflammatory
bowel disease, nontropical sprue, subacute hepatic necrosis
|
|
Hematologic
disorders
|
Acquired
hemolytic anemia, acute allergic purpura, leukemia, autoimmune
hemolytic anemia, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, multiple myeloma
|
|
Systemic
inflammation
|
Acute
respiratory distress syndrome (sustained therapy with moderate dosage
accelerates recovery and decreases mortality)
|
|
Infections
|
Acute
respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis
|
|
Inflammatory
conditions of bones and joints
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Arthritis,
bursitis, tenosynovitis
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Neurologic
disorders
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Cerebral
edema (large doses of dexamethasone are given to patients following
brain surgery to minimize cerebral edema in the postoperative
period), multiple sclerosis
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Organ
transplants
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Prevention
and treatment of rejection (immunosuppression)
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Pulmonary
diseases
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Aspiration
pneumonia, bronchial asthma, prevention of infant respiratory
distress syndrome, sarcoidosis
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Renal
disorders
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Nephrotic
syndrome
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Skin
diseases
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Atopic
dermatitis, dermatoses, lichen simplex chronicus (localized
neurodermatitis), mycosis fungoides, pemphigus, seborrheic
dermatitis, xerosis
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Thyroid
diseases
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Malignant
exophthalmos, subacute thyroiditis
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Miscellaneous
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Hypercalcemia,
mountain sickness
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Since corticosteroids are not
usually curative, the pathologic process may progress while clinical
manifestations are suppressed. Therefore, chronic therapy with these drugs
should be undertaken with great care and only when the seriousness of the
disorder warrants their use and when less hazardous measures have been
exhausted.
In general, attempts should be
made to bring the disease process under control using medium- to
intermediate-acting glucocorticoids such as prednisone and prednisolone
(Table 39–1), as well as all ancillary measures possible to keep the dose
low. Where possible, alternate-day therapy should be used (see the
following text). Therapy should not be decreased or stopped abruptly.
When prolonged therapy is anticipated, it is helpful to obtain chest
x-rays and a tuberculin test, since glucocorticoid therapy can reactivate
dormant tuberculosis. The presence of diabetes, peptic ulcer,
osteoporosis, and psychological disturbances should be taken into
consideration, and cardiovascular function should be assessed.
Treatment for transplant
rejection is a very important application of glucocorticoids. The
efficacy of these agents is based on their ability to reduce antigen
expression from the grafted tissue, delay revascularization, and
interfere with the sensitization of cytotoxic T lymphocytes and the
generation of primary antibody-forming cells.
Toxicity
The benefits obtained from
glucocorticoids vary considerably. Use of these drugs must be carefully
weighed in each patient against their widespread effects on every part of
the organism. The major undesirable effects of glucocorticoids are the
result of their hormonal actions, which lead to the clinical picture of
iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome (see later in text).
When glucocorticoids are used
for short periods (< 2 weeks), it is unusual to see serious adverse
effects even with moderately large doses. However, insomnia, behavioral
changes (primarily hypomania), and acute peptic ulcers are occasionally
observed even after only a few days of treatment. Acute pancreatitis is a
rare but serious acute adverse effect of high-dose glucocorticoids.
Metabolic Effects
Most patients who are given
daily doses of 100 mg of hydrocortisone or more (or the equivalent amount
of synthetic steroid) for longer than 2 weeks undergo a series of changes
that have been termed iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome. The rate of
development is a function of the dosage and the genetic background of the
patient. In the face, rounding, puffiness, fat deposition, and plethora
usually appear (moon facies). Similarly, fat tends to be redistributed
from the extremities to the trunk, the back of the neck, and the
supraclavicular fossae. There is an increased growth of fine hair over
the face, thighs and trunk. Steroid-induced punctate acne may appear, and
insomnia and increased appetite are noted. In the treatment of dangerous
or disabling disorders, these changes may not require cessation of
therapy. However, the underlying metabolic changes accompanying them can
be very serious by the time they become obvious. The continuing breakdown
of protein and diversion of amino acids to glucose production increase
the need for insulin and over time result in weight gain; visceral fat
deposition; myopathy and muscle wasting; thinning of the skin, with
striae and bruising; hyperglycemia; and eventually osteoporosis,
diabetes, and aseptic necrosis of the hip. Wound healing is also impaired
under these circumstances. When diabetes occurs, it is treated with diet
and insulin. These patients are often resistant to insulin but rarely
develop ketoacidosis. In general, patients treated with corticosteroids
should be on high protein and potassium-enriched diets.
Other Complications
Other serious adverse effects of
glucocorticoids include peptic ulcers and their consequences. The
clinical findings associated with certain disorders, particularly
bacterial and mycotic infections, may be masked by the corticosteroids,
and patients must be carefully monitored to avoid serious mishap when
large doses are used. Severe myopathy is more frequent in patients
treated with long-acting glucocorticoids. The administration of such
compounds has been associated with nausea, dizziness, and weight loss in
some patients. It is treated by changing drugs, reducing dosage, and
increasing potassium and protein intake.
Hypomania or acute psychosis may
occur, particularly in patients receiving very large doses of
corticosteroids. Long-term therapy with intermediate- and long-acting
steroids is associated with depression and the development of posterior
subcapsular cataracts. Psychiatric follow-up and periodic slit-lamp
examination is indicated in such patients. Increased intraocular pressure
is common, and glaucoma may be induced. Benign intracranial hypertension
also occurs. In dosages of 45 mg/m2/d or more of
hydrocortisone or its equivalent, growth retardation occurs in children.
Medium-, intermediate-, and long-acting glucocorticoids have greater
growth-suppressing potency than the natural steroid at equivalent doses.
When given in larger than
physiologic amounts, steroids such as cortisone and hydrocortisone, which
have mineralocorticoid effects in addition to glucocorticoid effects,
cause some sodium and fluid retention and loss of potassium. In patients
with normal cardiovascular and renal function, this leads to a
hypokalemic, hypochloremic alkalosis and eventually to a rise in blood
pressure. In patients with hypoproteinemia, renal disease, or liver
disease, edema may also occur. In patients with heart disease, even small
degrees of sodium retention may lead to heart failure. These effects can
be minimized by using synthetic non–salt-retaining steroids, sodium
restriction, and judicious amounts of potassium supplements.
Adrenal Suppression
When corticosteroids are
administered for more than 2 weeks, adrenal suppression may occur. If
treatment extends over weeks to months, the patient should be given
appropriate supplementary therapy at times of minor stress (two-fold
dosage increases for 24–48 hours) or severe stress (up to ten-fold dosage
increases for 48–72 hours) such as accidental trauma or major surgery. If
corticosteroid dosage is to be reduced, it should be tapered slowly. If
therapy is to be stopped, the reduction process should be quite slow when
the dose reaches replacement levels. It may take 2–12 months for the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis to function acceptably, and cortisol
levels may not return to normal for another 6–9 months. The
glucocorticoid-induced suppression is not a pituitary problem, and
treatment with ACTH does not reduce the time required for the return of
normal function.
If the dosage is reduced too
rapidly in patients receiving glucocorticoids for a certain disorder, the
symptoms of the disorder may reappear or increase in intensity. However,
patients without an underlying disorder (eg, patients cured surgically of
Cushing's disease) also develop symptoms with rapid reductions in
corticosteroid levels. These symptoms include anorexia, nausea or
vomiting, weight loss, lethargy, headache, fever, joint or muscle pain,
and postural hypotension. Although many of these symptoms may reflect
true glucocorticoid deficiency, they may also occur in the presence of normal
or even elevated plasma cortisol levels, suggesting glucocorticoid
dependence.
Contraindications &
Cautions
Special Precautions
Patients receiving
glucocorticoids must be monitored carefully for the development of
hyperglycemia, glycosuria, sodium retention with edema or hypertension,
hypokalemia, peptic ulcer, osteoporosis, and hidden infections.
The dosage should be kept as low
as possible, and intermittent administration (eg, alternate-day) should
be used when satisfactory therapeutic results can be obtained on this
schedule. Even patients maintained on relatively low doses of
corticosteroids may require supplementary therapy at times of stress,
such as when surgical procedures are performed or intercurrent illness or
accidents occur.
Contraindications
Glucocorticoids must be
used with great caution in patients with peptic ulcer, heart disease or
hypertension with heart failure, certain infectious illnesses such as
varicella and tuberculosis, psychoses, diabetes, osteoporosis, or
glaucoma.
Selection of Drug & Dosage
Schedule
Glucocorticoid preparations
differ with respect to relative anti-inflammatory and mineralocorticoid
effect, duration of action, cost, and dosage forms available (Table
39–1), and these factors should be taken into account in selecting the
drug to be used.
ACTH versus Adrenocortical
Steroids
In patients with normal
adrenals, ACTH was used in the past to induce the endogenous production
of cortisol to obtain similar effects. However, except when an increase
in androgens is desirable, the use of ACTH as a therapeutic agent has
been abandoned. Instances in which ACTH was claimed to be more effective
than glucocorticoids were probably due to the administration of smaller
amounts of corticosteroids than were produced by the dosage of ACTH.
Dosage
In determining the dosage
regimen to be used, the physician must consider the seriousness of the
disease, the amount of drug likely to be required to obtain the desired
effect, and the duration of therapy. In some diseases, the amount
required for maintenance of the desired therapeutic effect is less than
the dose needed to obtain the initial effect, and the lowest possible
dosage for the needed effect should be determined by gradually lowering
the dose until a small increase in signs or symptoms is noted.
When it is necessary to maintain
continuously elevated plasma corticosteroid levels to suppress ACTH, a
slowly absorbed parenteral preparation or small oral doses at frequent
intervals are required. The opposite situation exists with respect to the
use of corticosteroids in the treatment of inflammatory and allergic
disorders. The same total quantity given in a few doses may be more
effective than that given in many smaller doses or in a slowly absorbed
parenteral form.
Severe autoimmune conditions involving
vital organs must be treated aggressively, and undertreatment is as
dangerous as overtreatment. To minimize the deposition of immune
complexes and the influx of leukocytes and macrophages, 1 mg/kg/d of
prednisone in divided doses is required initially. This dosage is
maintained until the serious manifestations respond. The dosage can then
be gradually reduced.
When large doses are required
for prolonged periods of time, alternate-day administration of the
compound may be tried after control is achieved. When used in this
manner, very large amounts (eg, 100 mg of prednisone) can sometimes be
administered with less marked adverse effects because there is a recovery
period between each dose. The transition to an alternate-day schedule can
be made after the disease process is under control. It should be done
gradually and with additional supportive measures between doses.
When selecting a drug for use in
large doses, a medium- or intermediate-acting synthetic steroid with
little mineralocorticoid effect is advisable. If possible, it should be
given as a single morning dose.
Special Dosage Forms
Local therapy, such as topical
preparations for skin disease, ophthalmic forms for eye disease,
intra-articular injections for joint disease, inhaled steroids for
asthma, and hydrocortisone enemas for ulcerative colitis, provides a
means of delivering large amounts of steroid to the diseased tissue with
reduced systemic effects.
Beclomethasone dipropionate, and
several other glucocorticoids—primarily budesonide and flunisolide and
mometasone furoate, administered as aerosols—have been found to be
extremely useful in the treatment of asthma (see Chapter 20).
Beclomethasone dipropionate,
triamcinolone acetonide, budesonide, flunisolide, and mometasone furoate
are available as nasal sprays for the topical treatment of allergic
rhinitis. They are effective at doses (one or two sprays one, two, or
three times daily) that in most patients result in plasma levels that are
too low to influence adrenal function or have any other systemic effects.
Corticosteroids incorporated in
ointments, creams, lotions, and sprays are used extensively in
dermatology. These preparations are discussed in more detail in Chapter
61.
Mineralocorticoids (Aldosterone,
Deoxycorticosterone, Fludrocortisone)
The most important
mineralocorticoid in humans is aldosterone. However, small amounts of DOC
(deoxycorticosterone) are also formed and released. Although the amount
is normally insignificant, DOC was of some importance therapeutically in
the past. Its actions, effects, and metabolism are qualitatively similar
to those described below for aldosterone.
Fludrocortisone, a synthetic
corticosteroid, is the most commonly prescribed salt-retaining hormone.
Aldosterone
Aldosterone is synthesized
mainly in the zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex. Its structure and
synthesis are illustrated in Figure 39–1.
The rate of aldosterone
secretion is subject to several influences. ACTH produces a moderate
stimulation of its release, but this effect is not sustained for more
than a few days in the normal individual. Although aldosterone is no less
than one third as effective as cortisol in suppressing ACTH, the
quantities of aldosterone produced by the adrenal cortex and its plasma
concentrations are insufficient to participate in any significant
feedback control of ACTH secretion.
Without ACTH, aldosterone
secretion falls to about half the normal rate, indicating that other
factors, eg, angiotensin, are able to maintain and perhaps regulate its
secretion (see Chapter 17). Independent variations between cortisol and
aldosterone secretion can also be demonstrated by means of lesions in the
nervous system such as decerebration, which decreases the secretion of
cortisol while increasing the secretion of aldosterone.
Physiologic & Pharmacologic
Effects
Aldosterone and other steroids
with mineralocorticoid properties promote the reabsorption of sodium from
the distal part of the distal convoluted tubule and from the cortical
collecting renal tubules, loosely coupled to the excretion of potassium
and hydrogen ion. Sodium reabsorption in the sweat and salivary glands,
gastrointestinal mucosa, and across cell membranes in general is also
increased. Excessive levels of aldosterone produced by tumors or
overdosage with synthetic mineralocorticoids lead to hypokalemia,
metabolic alkalosis, increased plasma volume, and hypertension.
Mineralocorticoids act by
binding to the mineralocorticoid receptor in the cytoplasm of target
cells, especially principal cells of the distal convoluted and collecting
tubules of the kidney. The drug-receptor complex activates a series of
events similar to those described above for the glucocorticoids and
illustrated in Figure 39–4. It is of interest that this receptor has the
same affinity for cortisol, which is present in much higher
concentrations in the extracellular fluid. The specificity for
mineralocorticoids in the kidney appears to be conferred, at least in
part, by the presence of the enzyme 11 -hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2,
which converts cortisol to cortisone. The latter has low affinity for the
receptor and is inactive as a mineralocorticoid or glucocorticoid. The
major effect of activation of the aldosterone receptor is increased
expression of Na+,K+ ATPase and the epithelial
sodium channel (ENaC).
Metabolism
Aldosterone is secreted at the
rate of 100–200 mcg/d in normal individuals with a moderate dietary salt
intake. The plasma level in men (resting supine) is about 0.007 mcg/dL.
The half-life of aldosterone injected in tracer quantities is 15–20
minutes, and it does not appear to be firmly bound to serum proteins.
The metabolism of aldosterone is
similar to that of cortisol, about 50 mcg/24 h appearing in the urine as
conjugated tetrahydroaldosterone. Approximately 5–15 mcg/24 h is excreted
free or as the 3-oxo glucuronide.
Deoxycorticosterone (DOC)
DOC, which also serves as a
precursor of aldosterone (Figure 39–1), is normally secreted in amounts
of about 200 mcg/d. Its half-life when injected into the human
circulation is about 70 minutes. Preliminary estimates of its
concentration in plasma are approximately 0.03 mcg/dL. The control of its
secretion differs from that of aldosterone in that the secretion of DOC
is primarily under the control of ACTH. Although the response to ACTH is
enhanced by dietary sodium restriction, a low-salt diet does not increase
DOC secretion. The secretion of DOC may be markedly increased in abnormal
conditions such as adrenocortical carcinoma and congenital adrenal
hyperplasia with reduced P450c11 or P450c17 activity.
Fludrocortisone
This compound, a potent steroid
with both glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid activity, is the most
widely used mineralocorticoid. Oral doses of 0.1 mg two to seven times
weekly have potent salt-retaining activity and are used in the treatment
of adrenocortical insufficiency associated with mineralocorticoid
deficiency. These dosages are too small to have important
anti-inflammatory or antigrowth effects.
Adrenal Androgens
The adrenal cortex secretes
large amounts of DHEA and smaller amounts of androstenedione and
testosterone. Although these androgens are thought to contribute to the
normal maturation process, they do not stimulate or support major
androgen-dependent pubertal changes in humans. Recent studies suggest
that DHEA and its sulfate may have other important physiologic actions.
If that is correct, these results are probably due to the peripheral
conversion of DHEA to more potent androgens or to estrogens and
interaction with androgen and estrogen receptors, respectively.
Additional effects may be exerted through an interaction with the GABAA
and glutamate receptors in the brain or with a nuclear receptor in
several central and peripheral sites. The therapeutic use of DHEA in
humans has been explored, but the substance has already been adopted with
uncritical enthusiasm by members of the sports drug culture and the
vitamin and food supplement culture.
The results of a
placebo-controlled trial of DHEA in patients with systemic lupus
erythematosus were recently reported as well as those of a study of DHEA
replacement in women with adrenal insufficiency. In both studies a small beneficial
effect was seen, with significant improvement of the disease in the
former and a clearly added sense of well-being in the latter. The
androgenic or estrogenic actions of DHEA could explain the effects of the
compound in both situations.
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