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Clinical factors associated with biochemical adrenal-cortisol insufficiency in hospitalized patients

Authors :
Stephanie M. Gwin
Ning-Ai Liu
Anat Ben-Shlomo
James Mirocha
Renee C. Sheinin
Shlomo Melmed
Annika K. Khine
Source :
The American journal of medicine. 127(8)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Diagnosis of adrenal-cortisol insufficiency is often misleading in hospitalized patients, as clinical and biochemical features overlap with comorbidities. We analyzed clinical determinants associated with a biochemical diagnosis of adrenal-cortisol insufficiency in non-intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalized patients.In a retrospective cohort study we reviewed 4668 inpatients with random morning cortisol levels ≤15 μg/dL hospitalized in our center between 2003 and 2010. Using serum cortisol threshold level of 18 μg/dL 30 or 60 minutes after Cortrosyn (250 μg; Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Rancho Cucamonga, Calif) injection to define biochemical adrenal-cortisol status, we characterized and compared insufficient (n = 108, serum cortisol ≤18 μg/dL) and sufficient (n = 394; serum cortisol18 μg/dL) non-ICU hospitalized patients.Commonly reported clinical and routine biochemical adrenal-cortisol insufficiency features were similar between insufficient and sufficient inpatients. Biochemical adrenal-cortisol insufficiency was associated with increased frequency of liver disease, specifically hepatitis C (P = .01) and prior orthotopic liver transplantation (P.001), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV; P = .005), and reported pre-existing male hypogonadism (P.001), as compared with the biochemical adrenal-cortisol sufficiency group. Forty percent of insufficient inpatients were not treated with glucocorticoids after diagnosis. Multivariable logistic analysis demonstrated that inpatients with higher cortisol levels (P = .0001) and higher diastolic blood pressure (P = .05), and females (P = .009) were more likely not to be treated, while those with previous short-term glucocorticoid treatment (P = .002), other coexisting endocrine diseases (P = .005), or who received an in-hospital endocrinology consultation (P.0001), were more likely to be replaced with glucocorticoids.Commonly reported adrenal-cortisol insufficiency features do not reliably identify hospitalized patients biochemically confirmed to have this disorder. Comorbidities including hepatitis C, prior orthotopic liver transplantation, HIV, and reported pre-existing male hypogonadism may help identify hospitalized non-ICU patients for more rigorous adrenal insufficiency assessment.

Details

ISSN :
15557162
Volume :
127
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....44fc9eaab29a397435de20e1952da5da