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Internal Medicine Journal Club

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Title: Internal Medicine Journal Club


1
Internal Medicine Journal Club
0
  • Heather Stamat-Valente, DO, MS
  • September 20, 2005

2
Case 1
0
  • 78 y/o male admitted with pneumoperitoneum
    remained hypotensive and required vasopressors
    post surgery. Random Total AM Cortisol level
    2.9 mcg/dL and after stimulation test (60 min)
    19.0 mcg/dL
  • Repeat random AM Total Cortisol level drawn the
    next day 15.5 mcg/dL

3
Case 2
0
  • 54 y/ male admitted with a perforated duodenal
    ulcer. Patient required 5 different vasopressors
    post surgery. Random Total AM Cortisol level
    7.6 mcg/dL
  • Lab normals _at_ IRMC
  • Total AM Cortisol 4.3-22.4 mcg/dL

4
Measurements of Serum Free Cortisol in Critically
Ill Patients
0
  • A. Hamrahian, MD, T. Oseni, MD, and B. Arafah, MD
  • NEJM 2004, 3501629-1638

5
Background
0
  • The incidence of adrenal insufficiency in sepsis
    and septic shock is approximately 30-70
  • Defined as hypotension resistant to volume
    resuscitation and dependent on vasopressors
  • In 2002, a study by Annane and colleagues
    demonstrated that steroids improve mortality in
    patients with septic shock and adrenal
    insufficiency

6
Background
0
  • In the study by Annane, adrenal insufficiency was
    defined as an increase in total cortisol
    lt 9 mcg/dL in response to a 250 mcg
    Cosyntropin Stimulation Test
  • This formed the basis for current practice of
    treating patients with septic shock and adrenal
    insufficiency with stress dose steroids

7
Background
0
  • Still, there is controversy about the best
    indicator of adrenal insufficiency in critically
    ill patients
  • Several criteria have been suggested to define
    adrenal insufficiency such as
  • Cosyntropin-stimulated total cortisol lt 18 mcg/dL
  • Change in total cortisol lt 9 mcg/dL in response
    to stimulation test
  • Total random cortisol level lt 25 mcg/dL

8
Background
0
  • 90 of circulating cortisol is protein bound
  • 70 to Corticosteroid-binding protein
  • 20 to Albumin
  • Changes in binding proteins can alter measured
    serum total cortisol concentrations without
    influencing free cortisol levels
  • Free cortisol level is the physiologically
    active form of the hormone

9
Background
0
  • Measured total cortisol levels can be
    misleadingly lower than anticipated and result in
    an incorrect diagnosis of adrenal impairment
  • Current standards for defining adrenal
    insufficiency are based on healthy persons who
    have normal concentrations of binding proteins

10
Hypotheses
0
  • Patients with presumable normal adrenal function,
    but decreased cortisol binding proteins, will
    have lower than expected concentrations of serum
    total cortisol, but appropriately elevated
    concentrations of free cortisol levels
  • The measurement of free cortisol concentrations
    will identify patients with normal or increased
    adrenal function, who on the basis of low total
    cortisol levels, would otherwise been incorrectly
    diagnosed with adrenal insufficiency

11
Methods
  • Patient Population and Study Design
  • Setting U.S. tertiary care center. IRB approved
    with written informed consent obtained from study
    participants, their legal guardians, or DPOA
  • Patients 66 critically ill with various
    illnesses and Acute Physiology, Age, and Chronic
    Health Evaluation (APACHE III) score 15 or higher
  • 60 patients from medical, surgical, or cardiac
    ICUs and 6 from general medical wards
  • 33 Healthy volunteers and 7 patients with adrenal
    insufficiency secondary to hypopituitarism
  • Design Cohort Study

12
APACHE III
  • Comprised of the sum of three components
  • Acute physiology score, a chronic health problems
    score, and an age score
  • Scores range from 0 to 299
  • Physiology (0 to 252)
  • Chronic health evaluation (0 to 23)
  • Age (0 to 24)
  • Higher values representing a worse prognosis

13
Methods
  • Exclusion Criteria
  • History of hypothalamic-pituitary, adrenal, or
    liver disease
  • Glucocorticoid or estrogen intake within the last
    year
  • Medication known to influence glucocorticoid
    secretion within the last 6 months
  • Pregnancy or breast-feeding

14
Methods
  • Baseline serum total and free cortisol,
    cosyntropin-stimulated total and free cortisol,
    and aldosterone concentrations were measured in
    the 66 critically ill patients, 33 healthy
    volunteers, and 7 patients with adrenal
    insufficiency
  • APACHE III scores range 15-77 used to determine
    severity of illness underlying disease processes
    were similar
  • Patients were divided into two groups based on
    serum albumin concentrations of lt2.5 g/dL (n36)
    or gt2.5 g/dL (n30) Table 1
  • Cosyntropin stimulated total cortisol levels
    vary, normal generally gt 18 mcg/dL - this study
    used 18.5 mcg/dL or greater as normal

15
Cosyntropin Stimulation Testfor Adrenal
Insufficiency
  • Baseline Random Cortisol level
  • Cosyntropin 250 mcg Stimulation Test
  • Measure 30 and 60 minutes after administration of
    Cosyntropin
  • Cosyntropin-Stimulated Total Cortisol lt 18 mcg/dL
  • Change in Total Cortisol lt 9 mcg/dL in response
    to stimulation test
  • Total Random Cortisol level lt 25 mcg/dL

16
Methods
  • Statistical Analysis
  • Data presented as means and SD
  • Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA w/nonparametric data
  • Wilcoxon rank sum test for nonparametric data
    comparisons between groups
  • Categorical data compared using chi square and
    Fishers exact test
  • Bonferronis correction for multiple comparisons
  • Regression lines for comparison between groups
  • SAS and SPSS

17
Results
  • The two groups of patients had similar clinical
    characteristics except for serum albumin, total
    protein, corticosteroid-binding globulin, and
    duration of hospitalization Table 1
  • Baseline and cosyntropin-stimulated total
    cortisol concentrations were significantly lower
    in the low albumin group

18
Results
  • However, serum free cortisol concentrations were
    similar in the two groups and were several times
    higher than the values in healthy volunteers
  • Fourteen of thirty-six (39) low albumin
    patients had subnormal cosyntropin stimulated
    total cortisol, which is associated with adrenal
    insufficiency Fig. 2 and Tables 2,3

19
Results
  • However, all 14 patients with subnormal total
    cortisol responses had cosyntropin-stimulated
    free cortisol concentrations higher than controls
    Table 2
  • Mineralcorticoid secretion was also measured and
    was normal in both patient groups

20
Results
  • The base-line and cosyntropin-stimulated serum
    total cortisol concentrations in the 19 patients
    who died were similar to the 47 who survived
  • Findings were similar for base-line and
    cosyntropin-stimulated free cortisol as well

21
Results
  • A comparison of the 18 patients who had sepsis
    with the 48 who had other illnesses showed
    similar concentrations of serum albumin,
    base-line serum total cortisol, base-line serum
    free cortisol, and cosyntropin-stimulated serum
    total and free cortisol

22
Results
  • The base-line serum total cortisol concentrations
    in healthy volunteers were correlated with
    concentrations of free cortisol and serum
    corticosteroid-binding globulin
  • Base-line serum total cortisol concentrations in
    the two patient groups were correlated with serum
    free cortisol levels and albumin concentration
    Fig. 3

23
What does all this mean?
  • Nearly 40 of the critically ill patients with
    hypoproteinemia had subnormal serum total
    cortisol concentrations even though the adrenal
    function was normal, while serum free cortisol
    concentrations remained elevated
  • This implies that serum free cortisol levels may
    be useful to determine who is truly has adrenal
    insufficiency and may prevent the unnecessary use
    of glucocorticoid therapies

24
Discussion
  • Study Design
  • Cohort Study - Advantages
  • Ethically safe
  • Subjects can be matched
  • Can establish timing and directionality of events
  • Eligibility criteria and outcome assessments can
    be standardize
  • Administratively easier and cheaper than RCT

25
Discussion
  • Study Design
  • Cohort Disadvantages
  • Controls may be difficult to identify
  • Exposure may be linked to a hidden exposure
  • Blinding is difficult
  • Randomization not present
  • For rare diseases, large sample size, or long
    follow-up necessary

26
Discussion
  • Study Limitations
  • Study had 18 patients with sepsis, not with
    septic shock or multi-organ dysfunction. All
    references to prior studies and the benefit seen
    with corticosteroids was with septic shock
  • The technique for measuring free cortisol levels
    is not widely available, is difficult, and
    expensive
  • No standard levels of free cortisol have been
    reported, so the definition of abnormal is not
    known

27
Discussion
  • This study raises some interesting questions
  • What is the true incidence of adrenal
    insufficiency in the critically ill?
  • If we have not been treating true adrenal
    insufficiency (using total vs. free levels of
    cortisol) then how do we get a response?
  • The study by Annane et al. published in JAMA 2002
    sets the gold standard for using change in total
    cortisol to discriminate responders from
    non-responders
  • Do free cortisol concentrations make a
    difference?

28
CORTICUS
  • Corticosteroid Therapy of Septic Shock
  • 800 patient multi-national, prospective,
    double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled
    trial
  • The use of low dose steroids to improve 28-day
    mortality in septic shock patients whose cortisol
    levels did not increase gt 9mcg/dL in response to
    cosyntropin stimulation
  • Total and free cortisol levels will be compared

29
Are the results of this diagnostic study valid?
  • Was there an independent, blind comparison with a
    reference (gold) standard of diagnosis?
  • Was the diagnostic test evaluated in an
    appropriate spectrum of patients (like those in
    whom it would be used in practice)?
  • Was the reference standard applied regardless of
    the test result?

30
Can you apply this valid, important evidence
about a diagnostic test in caring for your
patient?
  • Is the diagnostic test available, affordable,
    accurate, and precise in this setting?
  • Can you generate a clinically sensible estimate
    of your patients pre-test probability?
  • Will the resulting post-test probabilities affect
    your management and help your patient?
  • Would the consequences of the test help your
    patient?

31
Summary
  • This study indicates that severe hypoproteinemia
    results in lower than expected concentrations of
    serum total cortisol in 39 of critically ill
    patients
  • However, serum free cortisol concentrations are
    consistently elevated suggesting a substantial
    increase in glucocorticoid secretion
  • Caution should be used interpreting base-line and
    cosyntropin stimulated serum total cortisol
    values in critically ill patients with
    hypoproteinemia

32
Conclusion
  • Until serum free cortisol levels become widely
    available, the use of serum total cortisol
    concentration is recommended by the authors of
    this study

  • Clinical judgment must be exercised in deciding
    whether to administer glucocorticoids to
    critically ill patients

33
Conclusion
  • Case 1
  • Pt. given Solu-Cortef and midodrine off
    vasopresors within 12 hours after first dose
  • 2.9-?19 mcg/dL
  • 15.5 mcg/dL
  • Case 2
  • Pt. given Solu-Cortef and off all vasopressor
    therapy within 30 hours after first dose
  • 7.6 mcg/dL

34
References
  • Dubey A, Boujoukos A Free cortisol levels should
    not be used to determine adrenal responsiveness.
    http//ccforum.com/content/9/1/E2 2004.
  • Beishuizen A, Thijs LG, Vermes I.Patterns of
    corticosteroid-binding globulin and free cortisol
    index during septic shock and multitrauma.
    Intensive Care Med 2001271584-91.
  • leRoux CW, Chapman GA, Kong WM, Dhillo WS, Jones
    J, Alaghband-Zadeh J. Free cortisol index is e
    than serum total cortisol in determining
    hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal status in patients
    undergoing surgery. J Clin Endocrinol Metab
    2003882045-8.
  • Annane D, Sebille V, Charpentier C, Bollaert PE,
    Francois B, Korach JM, Capellier G, Cohen Y,
    Azoulay E, Troche G, Chaumet-Riffaut P,
    Bellissant E Effect of treatment with low doses
    of hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone on
    mortality in patients with septic shock. JAMA
    2002,288862-871.
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