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Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association. American Pharmaceutical Association
June/30/2000
Publication
Journal: JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
December/12/2016
Abstract
Adjunctive hydrocortisone therapy is suggested by the Surviving Sepsis Campaign in refractory septic shock only. The efficacy of hydrocortisone in patients with severe sepsis without shock remains controversial.
To determine whether hydrocortisone therapy in patients with severe sepsis prevents the development of septic shock.
Double-blind, randomized clinical trial conducted from January 13, 2009, to August 27, 2013, with a follow-up of 180 days until February 23, 2014. The trial was performed in 34 intermediate or intensive care units of university and community hospitals in Germany, and it included 380 adult patients with severe sepsis who were not in septic shock.
Patients were randomly allocated 1:1 either to receive a continuous infusion of 200 mg of hydrocortisone for 5 days followed by dose tapering until day 11 (n = 190) or to receive placebo (n = 190).
The primary outcome was development of septic shock within 14 days. Secondary outcomes were time until septic shock, mortality in the intensive care unit or hospital, survival up to 180 days, and assessment of secondary infections, weaning failure, muscle weakness, and hyperglycemia (blood glucose level >150 mg/dL [to convert to millimoles per liter, multiply by 0.0555]).
The intention-to-treat population consisted of 353 patients (64.9% male; mean [SD] age, 65.0 [14.4] years). Septic shock occurred in 36 of 170 patients (21.2%) in the hydrocortisone group and 39 of 170 patients (22.9%) in the placebo group (difference, -1.8%; 95% CI, -10.7% to 7.2%; P = .70). No significant differences were observed between the hydrocortisone and placebo groups for time until septic shock; mortality in the intensive care unit or in the hospital; or mortality at 28 days (15 of 171 patients [8.8%] vs 14 of 170 patients [8.2%], respectively; difference, 0.5%; 95% CI, -5.6% to 6.7%; P = .86), 90 days (34 of 171 patients [19.9%] vs 28 of 168 patients [16.7%]; difference, 3.2%; 95% CI, -5.1% to 11.4%; P = .44), and 180 days (45 of 168 patients [26.8%] vs 37 of 167 patients [22.2%], respectively; difference, 4.6%; 95% CI, -4.6% to 13.7%; P = .32). In the hydrocortisone vs placebo groups, 21.5% vs 16.9% had secondary infections, 8.6% vs 8.5% had weaning failure, 30.7% vs 23.8% had muscle weakness, and 90.9% vs 81.5% had hyperglycemia.
Among adults with severe sepsis not in septic shock, use of hydrocortisone compared with placebo did not reduce the risk of septic shock within 14 days. These findings do not support the use of hydrocortisone in these patients.
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00670254.
Publication
Journal: CMAJ
February/7/2011
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Recent studies have reported a high prevalence of relative adrenal insufficiency in patients with liver cirrhosis. However, the effect of corticosteroid replacement on mortality in this high-risk group remains unclear. We examined the effect of low-dose hydrocortisone in patients with cirrhosis who presented with septic shock.
METHODS
We enrolled patients with cirrhosis and septic shock aged 18 years or older in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial. Relative adrenal insufficiency was defined as a serum cortisol increase of less than 250 nmol/L or 9 μg/dL from baseline after stimulation with 250 μg of intravenous corticotropin. Patients were assigned to receive 50 mg of intravenous hydrocortisone or placebo every six hours until hemodynamic stability was achieved, followed by steroid tapering over eight days. The primary outcome was 28-day all-cause mortality.
RESULTS
The trial was stopped for futility at interim analysis after 75 patients were enrolled. Relative adrenal insufficiency was diagnosed in 76% of patients. Compared with the placebo group (n = 36), patients in the hydrocortisone group (n = 39) had a significant reduction in vasopressor doses and higher rates of shock reversal (relative risk [RR] 1.58, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.98-2.55, p = 0.05). Hydrocortisone use was not associated with a reduction in 28-day mortality (RR 1.17, 95% CI 0.92-1.49, p = 0.19) but was associated with an increase in shock relapse (RR 2.58, 95% CI 1.04-6.45, p = 0.03) and gastrointestinal bleeding (RR 3.00, 95% CI 1.08-8.36, p = 0.02).
CONCLUSIONS
Relative adrenal insufficiency was very common in patients with cirrhosis presenting with septic shock. Despite initial favourable effects on hemodynamic parameters, hydrocortisone therapy did not reduce mortality and was associated with an increase in adverse effects. (Current Controlled Trials registry no. ISRCTN99675218.).
Publication
Journal: Clinical Pharmacokinetics
January/18/1983
Abstract
Circadian (approximately equal to 24 hours) and other endogenous biological rhythms, detectable at all levels of organisation, constitute a temporal structure in all animal species, including man. Circadian, circannual, and other rhythmic changes in biological susceptibility and response of organisms to a large variety of physical and chemical agents, including medications and foods, are rather common phenomena. A better understanding of periodic and thus predictable changes in drug effects can be attained through consideration of three complementary concepts: the chronopharmacokinetics of a drug (rhythmic changes in its pharmacokinetics), the chronesthesy (rhythmic changes in susceptibility of target biosystems to the drug), and the chronergy (the drug-integrated overall effects). The chronopharmacokinetics of many drugs have been evaluated in man including sodium salicylate, aspirin, indomethacin, paracetamol (acetaminophen), phenacetin, amidopyrine, theophylline, digitalis, propranolol, clorazepate, hexobarbitone (hexobarbital), lithium, phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin), nortriptyline, ethanol, erythromycin, ampicillin, sulfasymazine, sulphanilamide, cisplatin (cis-diammine dichloroplatinum), d-xylose, ferrous sulphate, potassium chloride, hydrocortisone and prednisolone, among others. The roles presumably played by circadian rhythms in drug metabolising liver enzymes and kidney function are summarized, and the practical implications of chronopharmacokinetics, aiming both to improve in a quantitative manner the metabolic fate of a drug and its effectiveness, are discussed.
Publication
Journal: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
April/15/2010
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Chronic lung disease (CLD) remains a major problem in neonatal intensive care units. Persistent inflammation in the lungs is the most likely underlying pathogenesis. Corticosteroids have been used to either prevent or treat CLD because of their potent anti-inflammatory effects.
OBJECTIVE
To determine if postnatal corticosteroid treatment is of benefit in the prevention of chronic lung disease (CLD) in preterm infants. This review examines the outcome of trials where preterm infants at risk of CLD were given postnatal corticosteroids within the first seven days of life.
METHODS
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of postnatal corticosteroid therapy were sought from the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, MEDLINE (1966 - May 2008), hand searching paediatric and perinatal journals, examining previous review articles and information received from practising neonatologists. Authors of all studies were contacted, where possible, to confirm details of reported follow-up studies, or to obtain any information about long-term follow-up where none had been reported.
METHODS
Randomised controlled trials of postnatal corticosteroid treatment within the first 7 days of life (early) in high risk preterm infants were selected for this review. Most studies evaluated the use of dexamethasone but we also included studies that assessed hydrocortisone, even if it was used to manage hypotension.
METHODS
Data regarding clinical outcomes including mortality, CLD (including late rescue with corticosteroids, and need for home oxygen therapy), death or CLD, failure to extubate, complications during the primary hospitalisation (including infection, hyperglycaemia, hypertension, pulmonary air leak, patent ductus arteriosus (PDA), severe intraventricular haemorrhage (IVH), periventricular leucomalacia (PVL), necrotising enterocolitis (NEC), gastrointestinal bleeding, intestinal perforation, severe retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), and long-term outcome (including blindness, deafness, cerebral palsy and major neurosensory disability) were abstracted and analysed using RevMan 5.
RESULTS
Twenty-eight RCTs enrolling a total of 3740 participants were eligible for inclusion in this review. A meta-analysis of these trials demonstrated significant benefits as regards earlier extubation and decreased risks of CLD at both 28 days and 36 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA), death or CLD at 28 days and 36 weeks' PMA, PDA and ROP, including severe ROP. There were no significant differences in the rates of neonatal or subsequent mortality, infection, severe IVH, PVL, NEC or pulmonary haemorrhage. Gastrointestinal bleeding and intestinal perforation were important adverse effects and the risks of hyperglycaemia, hypertension, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and growth failure were also increased. In the twelve trials that reported late outcomes, several adverse neurological effects were found at follow-up examinations including developmental delay (not defined), cerebral palsy and abnormal neurological examination. However, major neurosensory disability was not significantly increased, either overall in the seven studies where this outcome could be determined, or in the two individual studies where the rates of cerebral palsy or abnormal neurological examination were significantly increased. Moreover, the rates of the combined outcomes of death or cerebral palsy, or of death or major neurosensory disability were not significantly increased. Dexamethasone was the drug used in most studies (n = 20); only eight studies used hydrocortisone. In subgroup analyses by type of corticosteroid, most of the beneficial and harmful effects were attributable to dexamethasone; hydrocortisone had little effect on any outcomes except for an increase in intestinal perforation and a borderline reduction in PDA.
CONCLUSIONS
The benefits of early postnatal corticosteroid treatment (</= 7 days), particularly dexamethasone, may not outweigh the known or potential adverse effects of this treatment. Although early corticosteroid treatment facilitates extubation and reduces the risk of chronic lung disease and patent ductus arteriosus, it causes short-term adverse effects including gastrointestinal bleeding, intestinal perforation, hyperglycaemia, hypertension, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and growth failure. Long-term follow-up studies report an increased risk of abnormal neurological examination and cerebral palsy. However, the methodological quality of the studies determining long-term outcomes is limited in some cases; the surviving children have been assessed predominantly before school age, and no study has been sufficiently powered to detect important adverse long-term neurosensory outcomes. There is a compelling need for the long-term follow-up and reporting of late outcomes, especially neurological and developmental outcomes, among surviving infants who participated in all randomised trials of early postnatal corticosteroid treatment. Hydrocortisone in the doses and regimens used in the reported RCTs has few beneficial or harmful effects and cannot be recommended for prevention of CLD.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Hypertension
September/26/2002
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Adipose tissue secretes vasoactive substances which may contribute to the development of obesity-related hypertension. The aim of this work was to study the expression of renin-angiotensin system genes in adipose tissue of obese hypertensive subjects and the hormonal regulation of these genes.
METHODS
Differential expression of renin-angiotensin system genes in subcutaneous abdominal adipocytes of 12 lean normotensive, eight obese normotensive, and 10 obese hypertensive women was determined in a cross-sectional study. In vitro hormonal regulation of these genes was studied in primary human adipocytes obtained by breast reduction from healthy women.
METHODS
In the clinical study, 24-h ambulatory blood pressure measurement and anthropometry were used to characterize the volunteers, and adipocytes were obtained by subcutaneous needle biopsy. The in vitro regulation of renin-angiotensin system genes by hydrocortisone, insulin, thyroxin, estradiol and angiotensin II on primary cultured human mammary adipocytes was studied by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR).
RESULTS
While expression of the angiotensinogen gene was significantly lower in adipocytes from both obese groups, the renin, angiotensin-converting enzyme and angiotensin II type 1 receptor genes were significantly upregulated in obese hypertensives. Hydrocortisone increased angiotensin II type 1 receptor gene and protein expression in a time- and dose-dependent manner in human adipocytes, but had no significant influence on other renin-angiotensin system genes. Expression of these genes was not significantly affected by any of the other tested hormones.
CONCLUSIONS
Renin-angiotensin system genes are differentially regulated in human obesity and hypertension. The role of the adipose-tissue renin-angiotensin system in the development of obesity-associated hypertension or metabolic disease clearly warrants further study.
Publication
Journal: Cancer Biotherapy and Radiopharmaceuticals
September/27/2009
Abstract
The anti-CTLA4 antibody, ipilimumab, has shown clinical activity against melanoma. Diarrhea due to immune-related colitis is the most frequent serious toxicity and, if untreated, may lead to intestinal perforation. Diarrhea treatment guidelines were developed based on clinical experience in over 2000 patients treated with ipilimumab, and these safety guidelines recommend systemic steroids as the first choice for the treatment of severe diarrhea. In this article, we present an alternative approach to the control of immune-related colitis by using the antitumor necrosis factor antibody, infliximab. Patients with metastatic melanoma received ipilimumab 10 mg/kg every 3 weeks for 4 doses, then every 3 months. Those who developed grade 2 diarrhea were treated with infliximab 5 mg/kg weeks 0 and 2 with mesalamine and loperamide. Steroids were given only for refractory cases requiring hospitalization. Of the first 3 cases of ipilimumab-induced diarrhea, 2 proved refractory and required hospitalization, but 1 recovered quickly without systemic steroids. We then added hydrocortisone enemas daily to the above regimen, and the next 3 patients recovered from grade 2 ipilimumab-induced colitis without difficulty. Treatment with infliximab, mesalamine, and hydrocortisone enemas may produce a rapid improvement in ipilimumab-induced colitis and avoid the administration of systemic steroids.
Publication
Journal: Blood
August/5/1998
Abstract
Central nervous system (CNS) relapse has been an obstacle to uniformly successful treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) for many years. We therefore intensified intrathecal chemotherapy (simultaneously administered methotrexate, hydrocortisone, and cytarabine) for 165 consecutive children with newly diagnosed ALL enrolled in Total Therapy Study XIIIA from December 1991 to August 1994. The 64 patients (39%) who had 1 or more blast cells in cytocentrifuged preparations of cerebrospinal fluid at diagnosis, with or without associated higher-risk features, received additional doses of intrathecal chemotherapy during remission induction and the first year of continuation treatment. Patients with higher-risk leukemia, regardless of cerebrospinal fluid findings, also received additional doses of intrathecal chemotherapy during the first year of continuation treatment. Cranial irradiation was reserved for patients with higher-risk leukemia (22% of the total). The 5-year cumulative risk of an isolated CNS relapse among all 165 patients was 1.2% (95% confidence interval, 0% to 2.9%), whereas that of any CNS relapse was 3.2% (0. 4% to 6.0%). The probability of surviving for 5 years without an adverse event of any type was 80.2% +/- 9.2% (SE). Our results suggest that early intensification of intrathecal chemotherapy will reduce the risk of CNS relapse to a very low level in children with ALL, securing a higher event-free survival rate overall.
Publication
Journal: Clinical Science
January/6/2002
Abstract
Android obesity is associated with increased cortisol secretion. Direct effects of cortisol on gluconeogenesis and other parameters of insulin resistance were determined in normal subjects. Gluconeogenesis was determined using the reciprocal pool model of Haymond and Sunehag (HS method), and by the Cori cycle/lactate dilution method of Tayek and Katz (TK method). Glucose production (GP) and gluconeogenesis were measured after a 3 h baseline infusion and after a 4-8 h pituitary-pancreatic infusion of somatostatin, replacement insulin, growth hormone (GH), glucagon and a high dose of cortisol (hydrocortisone). The pituitary-pancreatic infusion maintains insulin, GH and glucagon concentrations within the fasting range, while increasing the concentration of only one hormone, cortisol. Two groups of five subjects were each given high-dose cortisol administration, and results were compared with those from a group of six 'fasting alone' subjects (no infusion) at 16 and 20 h of fasting. Fasting GP (12 h fasting) was similar in all groups, averaging 12.5+/-0.2 micromol x min(-1) x kg(-1). Gluconeogenesis, as a percentage of GP, was 35+/-2% using the HS method and 40+/-2% using the TK method. After 16 h of fasting, GP had fallen (11.5+/-0.6 micromol x min(-1) x kg(-1)) and gluconeogenesis had increased (55+/-5% and 57+/-5% of GP by the HS and TK methods respectively; P<0.05). High-dose cortisol infusion for 4 h increased serum cortisol (660+/-30 nmol/l; P<0.05), blood glucose (7.9+/-0.5 mmol/l; P<0.05) and GP (14.8+/-0.8 micromol x min(-1) x kg(-1); P<0.05). The increase in GP was due entirely to an increase in gluconeogenesis, determined by either the HS or the TK method (66+/-6% and 65+/-5% of GP respectively; P<0.05). Thus cortisol administration in humans increases GP by stimulating gluconeogenesis. Smaller increases in serum cortisol may contribute to the abnormal glucose metabolism known to occur in the metabolic syndrome.
Publication
Journal: Disability and Rehabilitation
February/9/2009
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To determine the effectiveness of high volume image guided injections (HVIGI) for chronic Achilles tendinopathy.
METHODS
We included in the study 30 consecutive patients (mean age 37.2 years, range 24 - 58 years) with Achilles tendinopathy for a mean of 35.8 months (range 2 - 276 months) who had failed to improve after a three-month programme of eccentric loading of the gastro-soleus complex. Patients were injected with 10 ml of 0.5% Bupivacaine Hydrochloride, 25 mg Hydrocortisone acetate, and up to 40 ml of injectable normal saline. A study-specific questionnaire and the Victorian Institute of Sport Assessment - Achilles tendon (VISA-A) were retrospectively administered to assess short- and long-term pain and functional improvement.
RESULTS
Some 21 patients (70%) responded. Patients reported significant short-term improvement at 4 weeks of both pain (mean change 50 mm, [SD 28, p < 0.0001], from a mean of 76 mm [SD 18.2], to a mean of 25 mm [SD 23.3]), and function scores (mean change 51 mm, [SD 31.2, p < 0.0001], from a mean of 78 mm [SD 20.8], to a mean of 27 mm [SD 28.4]). Patients also reported significant long-term improvement in symptoms using the VISA-A questionnaire (mean change 31.2 points, [SD = 28, p < 0.0001], from a mean of 44.8 points [SD 17.7], to a mean of 76.2 points [SD 24.6]) at a mean of 30.3 weeks from the injection.
CONCLUSIONS
HVIGI significantly reduces pain and improves function in patients with resistant Achilles tendinopathy in the short- and long-term.
Publication
Journal: Gerontologia
February/12/1974
Publication
Journal: Journal of Experimental Medicine
June/7/1971
Abstract
Corticosteroids suppress the humoral antibody response of mice to sheep erythrocytes. This response depends on interactions between thymus-derived helper cells and bone marrow-derived antibody-forming cell precursors (AFC precursors). Previous experiments had shown that spleen cells (a mixture of thymus-derived and marrow-derived cells) were sensitive to corticosteroids while AFC precursors in the bone marrow were resistant. The present experiments showed that the thymus of a mouse given 2.5 mg of hydrocortisone acetate, although containing only about 5% of the number of cells of a normal thymus, was as effective as a normal thymus in cooperating with bone marrow when transferred to irradiated syngeneic mice and stimulated with SRBC. The proliferative response of thymus helper cells to SRBC was also resistant to hydrocortisone. In this context, the majority of thymic cells are in the cortex, are rapidly dividing, are sensitive to corticosteroids and are not iminunocompetent. A small number of thymic cells, probably located in the medulla, are resistant to corticosteroids, but are immunocompetent since they can serve as helper cells. The hydrocortisone-sensitive phase of the splenic response to SRBC was found to be the bone marrow-derived AFC precursor since spleens from hydrocortisone-treated donors had immunocompetence restored by normal bone marrow but not by normal thymus cells.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
June/13/2002
Abstract
Leptin is secreted by the white adipose tissue and modulates energy homeostasis. Nutritional, neural, neuroendocrine, paracrine, and autocrine factors, including the sympathetic nervous system and the adrenal medulla, have been implicated in the regulation of leptin secretion. Classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is characterized by a defect in cortisol and aldosterone secretion, impaired development and function of the adrenal medulla, and adrenal hyperandrogenism. To examine leptin secretion in patients with classic CAH in relation to their adrenomedullary function and insulin and androgen secretion, we studied 18 children with classic CAH (12 boys and 6 girls; age range 2-12 yr) and 28 normal children (16 boys and 12 girls; age range 5-12 yr) matched for body mass index (BMI). Serum leptin concentrations were significantly higher in patients with CAH than in control subjects (8.1 +/- 2.0 vs. 2.5 +/- 0.6 ng/ml, P = 0.01), and this difference persisted when leptin values were corrected for BMI. When compared with their normal counterparts, children with CAH had significantly lower plasma epinephrine (7.1 +/- 1.3 vs. 50.0 +/- 4.2, P < 0.001) and free metanephrine concentrations (18.4 +/- 2.4 vs. 46.5 +/- 4.0, P < 0.001) and higher fasting serum insulin (10.6 +/- 1.4 vs. 3.2 +/- 0.2 microU/ml, P < 0.001) and testosterone (23.7 +/- 5.3 vs. 4.6 +/- 0.5 ng/dl, P = 0.003) concentrations. Insulin resistance determined by the homeostasis model assessment method was significantly greater in children with classic CAH than in normal children (2.2 +/- 0.3 vs. 0.7 +/- 0.04, P < 0.001). Leptin concentrations were significantly and negatively correlated with epinephrine (r = -0.50, P = 0.001) and free metanephrine (r = -0.48, P = 0.002) concentrations. Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis indicated that serum leptin concentrations were best predicted by BMI in both patients and controls. Gender predicted serum leptin concentrations in controls but not in patients with classic CAH. No association was found between the dose of hydrocortisone and serum leptin (r = -0.17, P = 0.5) or insulin (r = 0.24, P = 0.3) concentrations in children with CAH. Our findings indicate that children with classic CAH have elevated fasting serum leptin and insulin concentrations, and insulin resistance. These most likely reflect differences in long-term adrenomedullary hypofunction and glucocorticoid therapy. Elevated leptin and insulin concentrations in patients with CAH may further enhance adrenal and ovarian androgen production, decrease the therapeutic efficacy of glucocorticoids, and contribute to later development of polycystic ovary syndrome and/or the metabolic syndrome and their complications.
Publication
Journal: Critical Care Medicine
January/26/2000
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
The exposure to intense physical and psychological stress during intensive care can result in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in survivors. Cortisol is a biological stress mediator that can have a protective effect during severe stress. The administration of stress doses of hydrocortisone during treatment in the intensive care unit could theoretically result in a lower incidence of PTSD. We tested this hypothesis in survivors of septic shock.
METHODS
A retrospective case-controlled analysis.
METHODS
A 20-bed multidisciplinary intensive care unit of a tertiary-care university hospital.
METHODS
We identified 27 patients who received standard therapy for septic shock. These patients served as controls and were compared with an equal number of patients who received hydrocortisone in addition to standard treatment. These patients were selected from our database with regard to age (+/-4 yrs), gender, and cause of septic shock to be as similar as possible with control patients.
METHODS
Patients from the hydrocortisone group had received stress doses of hydrocortisone (100 mg bolus, followed by 0.18 mg/kg/hr) in addition to standard treatment. Patients from the control group received standard protocol-driven treatment only. PTSD was diagnosed with the Posttraumatic Stress Syndrome-10 inventory, a self-report scale for diagnosis of PTSD. Health-related quality of life was measured using the Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form Survey (Medical Outcomes Trust, Boston, MA), which consists of 36 questions.
RESULTS
Patients who received hydrocortisone during septic shock had a significantly lower incidence of PTSD than patients who received standard treatment only (5 of 27 vs. 16 of 27; p = .01) and had significantly higher scores on the mental health index of the Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form health-related quality-of-life questionnaire (68 vs. 44 points; p = .009).
CONCLUSIONS
Data from this study support the hypothesis that the administration of stress doses of hydrocortisone in doses equivalent to the maximal endocrine secretion rate during septic shock reduces the incidence of PTSD and improves emotional well-being in survivors. This hypothesis should be tested in a prospective randomized trial.
Publication
Journal: Critical Care Medicine
July/4/2005
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Adrenal failure is common in critically ill patients, particularly those with sepsis. As liver failure and sepsis are both associated with increased circulating levels of endotoxin and proinflammatory mediators and reduced levels of apoprotein-1/high-density lipoprotein, we postulated that adrenal failure may be common in patients with liver disease.
METHODS
Clinical study.
METHODS
Liver transplant intensive care unit.
METHODS
The study cohort included 340 patients with liver disease.
METHODS
Based on preliminary observational data, all patients admitted to our 28-bed liver transplant intensive care unit (LTICU) undergo adrenal function testing. An honest broker system was used to extract clinical, hemodynamic, medication, and laboratory data on patients admitted to the LTICU from March 2002 to March 2004. A random (stress) cortisol level <20 microg/dL in a highly stressed patient (respiratory failure, hypotension) was used to diagnose adrenal insufficiency. In all other patients, a random cortisol level <15 microg/dL or a 30-min level <20 microg/dL post-low-dose (1 microg) cosyntropin was considered diagnostic of adrenal insufficiency. Patients were grouped as follows: a) chronic liver failure; b) fulminant hepatic failure; c) patients immediately status post-orthotopic liver transplantation receiving a steroid-free protocol of immunosuppression; and d) patients status post-remote liver transplant >>/=6 months). The decision to treat patients with stress doses of hydrocortisone was at the discretion of the treating intensivist and transplant surgeon.
RESULTS
Two-hundred and forty-five (72%) patients met our criteria for adrenal insufficiency (the hepatoadrenal syndrome). Eight (33%) patients with fulminant hepatic failure, 97 (66%) patients with chronic liver disease, 31(61%) patients with a remote history of liver transplantation, and 109 (92%) patients who had undergone liver transplantation under steroid-free immunosuppression were diagnosed with adrenal insufficiency. The high-density lipoprotein level at the time of adrenal testing was the only variable predictive of adrenal insufficiency (p < .0001). In vasopressor-dependent patients with adrenal insufficiency, treatment with hydrocortisone was associated with a significant reduction (p = .02) in the dose of norepinephrine at 24 hrs, whereas the dose of norepinephrine was significantly higher (p = .04) in those patients with adrenal failure not treated with hydrocortisone. In vasopressor-dependent patients without adrenal insufficiency, treatment with hydrocortisone did not affect vasopressor dose at 24 hrs. One hundred and forty-one patients (26.4%) died during their hospitalization. The baseline serum cortisol was 18.8 +/- 16.2 microg/dL in the nonsurvivors compared with 13.0 +/- 11.8 microg/dL in the survivors (p < .001). Of those patients with adrenal failure who were treated with glucocorticoids, the mortality rate was 26% compared with 46% (p = .002) in those who were not treated. In those patients receiving vasopressor agents at the time of adrenal testing, the baseline cortisol was 10.0 +/- 4.8 microg/dL in those with adrenal insufficiency compared with 35.6 +/- 21.2 microg/dL in those with normal adrenal function. Vasopressor-dependent patients who did not have adrenal failure had a mortality rate of 75%.
CONCLUSIONS
Patients with liver failure and patients post-liver transplantation have an exceedingly high incidence of adrenal failure, which may be pathophysiologically related to low levels of high-density lipoprotein. Treatment of patients with adrenal failure may improve outcome. High baseline serum cortisol levels may be a maker of disease severity and portend a poor prognosis.
Publication
Journal: British medical journal (Clinical research ed.)
March/25/1982
Abstract
Altogether 117 patients with advanced breast cancer were treated with either tamoxifen 10 mg by mouth twice daily or aminoglutethimide 250 mg by mouth four times daily with hydrocortisone 20 mg twice daily in a randomised cross-over trial in which patients who failed to respond to the first treatment or relapsed while receiving it were switched to the other. Eighteen (30%) out of 60 patients initially treated with tamoxifen achieved an objective response and 11 (18%) showed stable disease. Seventeen (30%) out of 57 patients treated initially with aminoglutethimide achieved an objective response and 13 (23%) achieved stable disease. Objective responses in bone metastases were achieved more commonly with aminoglutethimide (11 patients (35%)) than with tamoxifen (five (17%)). The predicted median duration of response for tamoxifen was 15 months and for aminoglutethimide over 15 months (no significant difference). Five (15%) out of 34 patients who failed to respond to tamoxifen and four out of six patients who relapsed after responding to tamoxifen subsequently responded to aminoglutethimide. In contrast, only two (6%) out of 31 patients who failed to respond to aminoglutethimide and none out of four patients who relapsed while receiving aminoglutethimide subsequently responded to tamoxifen. The main side effects occurring in the 97 patients who received aminoglutethimide as first- or second-line treatment were lethargy and drowsiness (36 patients) and rash (29); seven patients had to stop treatment because of side effects. In contrast, side effects were rare and mild with tamoxifen and no patient had to stop treatment because of them. Both tamoxifen and aminoglutethimide appeared from this study to be equally effective in the medical endocrine treatment of advanced breast cancer.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Endocrinology
April/4/2001
Abstract
Beta-casein gene transcription is controlled primarily by a composite response element (CoRE) that integrates signaling from the lactogenic hormones, PRL, insulin, and hydrocortisone, in mammary epithelial cells. This CoRE contains binding sites for STAT5 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 5) and C/EBPbeta (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-beta) and several half-sites for glucocorticoid receptor (GR). To examine how interactions among these three transcription factors might regulate beta-casein gene transcription, a COS cell reconstitution system was employed. Cooperative transactivation was observed when all three factors were expressed, but unexpectedly was not seen between STAT5 and C/EBPbeta in the absence of full-length, transcriptionally active GR. Cooperativity required the amino-terminal transactivation domain of C/EBPbeta, and neither C/EBPalpha nor C/EBPdelta was able to substitute for C/EBPbeta when cotransfected with STAT5 and GR. Different GR determinants were needed for transcriptional cooperation between STAT5 and GR as compared with those required for all three transcription factors. These studies provide some new insights into the mechanisms responsible for high level, tissue-specific expression conferred by the beta-casein CoRE.
Publication
Journal: New England Journal of Medicine
September/20/1989
Abstract
Severe hyponatremia occurs in some patients with untreated hypopituitarism, but it is not known whether such hyponatremia is caused by the hypersecretion of vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone). This report describes severe, symptomatic hyponatremia in five women 59 to 83 years old (serum sodium, 111 to 118 mmol per liter) who presented with hypopituitarism (which had been previously undiagnosed in four). Plasma vasopressin was inappropriately high (1.3 to 25.8 pmol per liter [1.4 to 28 ng per liter]) in relation to plasma osmolality (236 to 260 mOsm per kilogram of body weight). All five patients had normal renal function and no signs of dehydration or volume depletion. The hyponatremia was resolved within a few days after the institution of hydrocortisone therapy, after infusion of normotonic or hypertonic saline had been found to be less effective. When four of the patients were later restudied while receiving maintenance hydrocortisone treatment, the relation between plasma vasopressin and osmolality was normal. We conclude that ACTH deficiency may cause the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. The beneficial effect of hydrocortisone is probably exerted through the suppression of vasopressin secretion.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Journal of Clinical Investigation
June/11/1978
Abstract
The present study was undertaken to determine the effect of in vivo hydrocortisone on the kinetics of subpopulations of normal human peripheral blood (PB) thymus-derived (T) cells. Normal volunteers received a single i.v. dose of hydrocortisone, and blood was taken just before, as well as 4, 24, and 48 h after hydrocortisone administration. T cells were purified from each specimen, and proportions and absolute numbers of T lymphocytes bearing receptors for the Fc portion of IgG (T(.G)) and for the Fc portion of IgM (T(.M)) were enumerated by rosetting T cells with bovine erythrocytes which had been coated with either antibovine erythrocyte IgG or IgM. 4 h after i.v. administration of hydrocortisone, T(.M) cells decreased from 52 (+/-5%) to 23 (+/-6%) of PB T cells (P < 0.01) and the absolute number of T(.M) cells decreased from 1,028 (+/-171) per mm(3) to 103 (+/-23) per mm(3) (P < 0.001). In contrast, relative proportion of T(.G) cells increased from 22 (+/-4%) to 66 (+/-7%), while the absolute numbers of T(.G) cells were essentially unchanged (P>> 0.2). In vitro studies involving preincubation of T cells with hydrocortisone before rosette determination of T(.G) or T(.M) cells demonstrated that the decrease in absolute numbers of T(.M) cells did not represent hydrocortisone interference with T(.M) rosette formation, nor did it represent a switch of T(.M) cells to T(.G) cells. Thus, administration of hydrocortisone to normal subjects produces a selective depletion from the circulation of T lymphocytes which possess receptors for the Fc portion of IgM (T(.M) cells) and of T cells which possess no detectable F(C) receptor (T(.non-M, non-G) cells). T(.G) cells are relatively resistant to the lymphopenic effect of hydrocortisone. These data clearly demonstrate that in vivo corticosteroids have a differential effect on the kinetics of identifiable and distinct subsets of cells in the human T-cell class.
Publication
Journal: European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
April/11/2005
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Within a lifetime, approximately 15% of ulcerative colitis (UC) patients will have a severe relapse necessitating admission to hospital. Despite intravenous steroid treatment, approximately 25% will require either surgery or ciclosporin (CsA) rescue therapy. Initial response rates to CsA have been encouraging, but remission rates have been disappointing. There is a paucity of long-term data on UC patients who have been brought into remission with CsA.
OBJECTIVE
To report our 7 year experience on the use of CsA in acute UC and to highlight long-term follow-up data on these patients.
METHODS
A retrospective database of 76 UC patients requiring CsA between 1996 and 2003 was constructed. CsA was started on the basis of their C-reactive protein (CRP) and/or stool frequency after 3 days or after 5-7 days of i.v. hydrocortisone. The patients (33 female, 43 male, mean age 44.5 years) were followed up for a median 2.9 years (range 0.2-7.0 years). Fifty-four patients received i.v. CsA (4 mg/kg), while 22 received oral CsA (5 mg/kg). Long-term outcome was evaluated by Kaplan-Meier survival analysis: time to first relapse and time to surgery.
RESULTS
Median disease duration was 6.6 years. Median CRP and stool frequency at day 3 was 20 mg/l and 6 per day, respectively. Fifty-six patients (74%) achieved initial remission. CsA was discontinued in only four patients due to side effects. Duration of i.v. steroids or the addition of AZA did not improve time to first relapse or time to surgery. Comparison between i.v. CsA and oral CsA revealed a statistically significant difference in time to first relapse (P < 0.01) and time to surgery (P < 0.05) in favour of oral CsA.
CONCLUSIONS
These data describe the long-term outcome of the largest series of patients so far reported that have had treatment with CsA for severe refractory UC. If patients achieved initial remission with CsA, after 1 year, 65% had relapsed and after 3 years 90% had relapsed. After 7 years, 58% had come to colectomy. Minor side effects were frequent, but none were life threatening. There was no increase in post-operative complications in those who came to colectomy.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Immunology
December/15/1991
Abstract
Glucocorticoids characteristically induce eosinopenia in vivo and are effective for treating allergic and other eosinophilic disorders. We studied the effect of glucocorticoids on cytokine-induced survival of human eosinophils in vitro. Eosinophils were purified from normal or mildly atopic volunteers by Percoll density gradient and incubated for 4 days in the presence of cytokine plus steroid. Cell viabilities were determined by staining cells with fluorescein diacetate and propidium iodide. In the absence of glucocorticoids, human rIL-5 enhanced eosinophil survival in a dose-dependent manner, from 22 fM for a minimal effect to 2200 fM for maximal effect. When eosinophils were cultured with a submaximal concentration of rIL-5 (220 fM), dexamethasone, methylprednisolone, and hydrocortisone inhibited eosinophil survival in a dose-dependent manner. Inhibition was time-dependent and required at least 2 days' exposure of eosinophils to dexamethasone. Dexamethasone, methylprednisolone, and hydrocortisone at 1000 nM inhibited survival by 88 +/- 2, 66 +/- 9 and 37 +/- 7%. In contrast, estradiol and testosterone (1000 nM) had no effect on eosinophil survival. When eosinophils were incubated with varying concentrations of human rIL-5 and 1000 nM dexamethasone, survival inhibition was reduced at higher concentrations of human rIL-5, and completely abolished by human rIL-5 23,000 fM. Human recombinant granulocyte-macrophage CSF, human rIL-3, and human rIFN-gamma also enhanced eosinophil survival in a dose-dependent manner and dexamethasone (1000 nM) strongly inhibited cell survival when submaximal concentrations of these cytokines were used. The effects of dexamethasone were reversed by higher concentrations of granulocyte-macrophage CSF (10 U/ml) and IL-3 (3 ng/ml). However, even 1000 U/ml IFN-gamma did not overcome dexamethasone inhibition, indicating a difference between the mechanism of eosinophil survival induced by IFN-gamma and other cytokines. These results suggest that glucocorticoids exert a direct, inhibitory effect on eosinophil survival, which may be important in the treatment of allergic and other eosinophilic disorders. Antagonism of this effect by higher amounts of cytokine may be a mechanism for glucocorticoid resistance.
Publication
Journal: Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism
November/18/2012
Abstract
Cortisol has one of the most distinct and fascinating circadian rhythms in human physiology. This is regulated by the central clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus. It has been suggested that cortisol acts as a secondary messenger between central and peripheral clocks, hence its importance in the synchronization of body circadian rhythms. Conventional immediate-release hydrocortisone, either at twice- or thrice-daily doses, is not capable of replicating physiological cortisol circadian rhythm and patients with adrenal insufficiency or congenital adrenal hyperplasia still suffer from a poor quality of life and increased mortality. Novel treatments for replacement therapy are therefore essential. Proof-of-concept studies using hydrocortisone infusions suggest that the circadian delivery of hydrocortisone may improve biochemical control and life quality in patients lacking cortisol with an impaired cortisol rhythm. Recently oral formulations of modified-release hydrocortisone are being developed and it has been shown that it is possible to replicate cortisol circadian rhythm and also achieve better control of morning androgen levels. These new drug therapies are promising and potentially offer a more effective treatment with less adverse effects. Definite improvements clearly need to be established in future clinical trials.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American College of Cardiology
November/1/2010
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
We sought to clarify the efficacy of corticosteroid therapy for preventing atrial fibrillation (AF) recurrence after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI).
BACKGROUND
The inflammatory process may cause acute AF recurrence after PVI. However, no studies have examined the relationship between corticosteroid administration and AF recurrence after PVI.
METHODS
A total of 125 patients with paroxysmal AF were randomized to receive either corticosteroids (corticosteroid group) or a placebo (placebo group). In the corticosteroid group, intravenous hydrocortisone (2 mg/kg) was given the day of the procedure, and oral prednisolone (0.5 mg/kg/day) was administered for 3 days after the PVI. The body temperature and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein level were measured before and on each of the first 3 days after ablation.
RESULTS
The prevalence of immediate AF recurrence (≤3 days after the PVI) was significantly lower in the corticosteroid group (7%) than in the placebo group (31%). The maximum body temperature and C-reactive protein during the initial 3 days after ablation and the increase in the body temperature and C-reactive protein level from baseline were significantly lower in the corticosteroid group than in the placebo group. Corticosteroid treatment did not decrease AF recurrences between 4 and 30 days after ablation. The AF-free rate at 14 months post-ablation was greater in the corticosteroid group (85%) than in the placebo group (71%, p=0.032 by the log-rank test).
CONCLUSIONS
Transient use of small amounts of corticosteroids shortly after AF ablation may be effective and safe for preventing not only immediate AF recurrences but also AF recurrences during the mid-term follow-up period after PVI.
Publication
Journal: The Lancet
May/31/2016
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia, a major complication of extreme prematurity, has few treatment options. Postnatal steroid use is controversial, but low-dose hydrocortisone might prevent the harmful effects of inflammation on the developing lung. In this study, we aimed to assess whether low-dose hydrocortisone improved survival without bronchopulmonary dysplasia in extremely preterm infants.
METHODS
In this double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised trial done at 21 French tertiary-care neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), we randomly assigned (1:1), via a secure study website, extremely preterm infants inborn (born in a maternity ward at the same site as the NICU) at less than 28 weeks of gestation to receive either intravenous low-dose hydrocortisone or placebo during the first 10 postnatal days. Infants randomly assigned to the hydrocortisone group received 1 mg/kg of hydrocortisone hemisuccinate per day divided into two doses per day for 7 days, followed by one dose of 0·5 mg/kg per day for 3 days. Randomisation was stratified by gestational age and all infants were enrolled by 24 h after birth. Study investigators, parents, and patients were masked to treatment allocation. The primary outcome was survival without bronchopulmonary dysplasia at 36 weeks of postmenstrual age. We used a sequential analytical design, based on intention to treat, to avoid prolonging the trial after either efficacy or futility had been established. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrial.gov, number NCT00623740.
RESULTS
1072 neonates were screened between May 25, 2008, and Jan 31, 2014, of which 523 were randomly assigned (256 hydrocortisone, 267 placebo). 255 infants on hydrocortisone and 266 on placebo were included in analyses after parents withdrew consent for one child in each group. Of the 255 infants assigned to hydrocortisone, 153 (60%) survived without bronchopulmonary dysplasia, compared with 136 (51%) of 266 infants assigned to placebo (odds ratio [OR] adjusted for gestational age group and interim analyses 1·48, 95% CI 1·02-2·16, p=0·04). The number of patients needed to treat to gain one bronchopulmonary dysplasia-free survival was 12 (95% CI 6-200). Sepsis rate was not significantly different in the study population as a whole, but subgroup analyses showed a higher rate only in infants born at 24-25 weeks gestational age who were treated with hydrocortisone (30 [40%] of 83 vs 21 [23%] of 90 infants; sub-hazard ratio 1·87, 95% CI 1·09-3·21, p=0·02). Other potential adverse events, including notably gastrointestinal perforation, did not differ significantly between groups.
CONCLUSIONS
In extremely preterm infants, the rate of survival without bronchopulmonary dysplasia at 36 weeks of postmenstrual age was significantly increased by prophylactic low-dose hydrocortisone. This strategy, based on a physiological rationale, could lead to substantial improvements in the management of the most premature neonates.
BACKGROUND
Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris.
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