scholarly journals Use of dual-release hydrocortisone in adrenal insufficiency

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinjan Patra ◽  
Ayan Roy ◽  
Madhukar Mittal ◽  
Ravindra Gayaprasad Shukla

Letter to editor in response to the study ‘Cardiometabolic and psychological effects of dual-release hydrocortisone: a cross-over study’.

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 204201881987116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentina Guarnotta ◽  
Mariagrazia Irene Mineo ◽  
Stefano Radellini ◽  
Giuseppe Pizzolanti ◽  
Carla Giordano

Background: Conventional glucocorticoid treatment has a significant impact on liver in patients with adrenal insufficiency. Dual-release hydrocortisone (DR-HC) provides physiological cortisol exposure, leading to an improvement in anthropometric and metabolic parameters. We aimed to evaluate the effects of 12-month DR-HC treatment on the hepatic steatosis index (HSI), a validated surrogate index of hepatic steatosis, in patients with secondary adrenal insufficiency (SAI). Methods: A total of 45 patients with hypopituitarism, 22 with hypogonadism, hypothyroidism, ACTH, and GH deficiencies, and 23 with hypogonadism, hypothyroidism, and ACTH deficiency, on replacement therapy for all the pituitary deficiencies, were switched from conventional hydrocortisone to DR-HC. At baseline and after 12 months, glucose and insulin levels, surrogate estimates of insulin sensitivity, and hepatic steatosis were evaluated through ultrasonography and HSI. Results: At diagnosis, ultrasonography documented steatosis in 31 patients (68.8%) while 33 (73.3%) showed high HSI. Hydrocortisone (HC) dose (β = 1.231, p  = 0.010), insulin resistance index (HOMA-IR) (β = 1.431, p = 0.002), and insulin sensitivity index (ISI)-Matsuda (β = −1.389, p = 0.034) were predictors of HSI at baseline. After 12 months of DR-HC, a significant decrease in body mass index (BMI) ( p = 0.008), waist circumference (WC) ( p = 0.010), fasting insulin ( p  = 0.041), HOMA-IR ( p = 0.047), HSI ( p < 0.001) and number of patients with HSI ⩾36 ( p = 0.003), and a significant increase in sodium ( p < 0.001) and ISI-Matsuda ( p = 0.031) were observed. HOMA-IR (β = 1.431, p  = 0.002) and ISI-Matsuda (β = −9.489, p < 0.001) were identified as independent predictors of HSI at 12 months. Conclusions: In adults with SAI, DR-HC is associated with an improvement in HSI, regardless of the dose used, mainly related to an improvement in insulin sensitivity.


2013 ◽  
Vol 09 (02) ◽  
pp. 177
Author(s):  
Roberta Giordano ◽  
Federica Guaraldi ◽  
Rita Berardelli ◽  
Ioannis Karamouzis ◽  
Valentina D Angelo ◽  
...  

In patients with adrenal insufficiency, glucocorticoids (GCs) are insufficiently secreted and GC replacement is essential for health and, indeed, life. Despite GC-replacement therapy, patients with adrenal insufficiency have a greater cardiovascular risk than the general population, and suffer from impaired health-related quality of life. Although the aim of the replacement GC therapy is to reproduce as much as possible the physiologic pattern of cortisol secretion by the normal adrenal gland, the pharmacokinetics of available oral immediate-release hydrocortisone or cortisone make it impossible to fully mimic the cortisol rhythm. Therefore, there is an unmet clinical need for the development of novel pharmaceutical preparations of hydrocortisone, in order to guarantee a more physiologic serum cortisol concentration time-profile, and to improve the long-term outcome in patients under GC substitution therapy.


Endocrine ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 507-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Maria Mongioì ◽  
Rosita Angela Condorelli ◽  
Federica Barbagallo ◽  
Sandro La Vignera ◽  
Aldo Eugenio Calogero

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Espiard ◽  
Johanna McQueen ◽  
Mark Sherlock ◽  
Oskar Ragnarsson ◽  
Ragnhildur Bergthorsdottir ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 171 (3) ◽  
pp. 369-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
A G Nilsson ◽  
C Marelli ◽  
D Fitts ◽  
R Bergthorsdottir ◽  
P Burman ◽  
...  

ObjectiveThe objective was to assess the long-term safety profile of dual-release hydrocortisone (DR-HC) in patients with adrenal insufficiency (AI).DesignRandomised, open-label, crossover trial of DR-HC or thrice-daily hydrocortisone for 3 months each (stage 1) followed by two consecutive, prospective, open-label studies of DR-HC for 6 months (stage 2) and 18 months (stage 3) at five university clinics in Sweden.MethodsSixty-four adults with primary AI started stage 1, and an additional 16 entered stage 3. Patients received DR-HC 20–40 mg once daily and hydrocortisone 20–40 mg divided into three daily doses (stage 1 only). Main outcome measures were adverse events (AEs) and intercurrent illness (self-reported hydrocortisone use during illness).ResultsIn stage 1, patients had a median 1.5 (range, 1–9) intercurrent illness events with DR-HC and 1.0 (1–8) with thrice-daily hydrocortisone. AEs during stage 1 were not related to the cortisol exposure-time profile. The percentage of patients with one or more AEs during stage 1 (73.4% with DR-HC; 65.6% with thrice-daily hydrocortisone) decreased during stage 2, when all patients received DR-HC (51% in the first 3 months; 54% in the second 3 months). In stages 1–3 combined, 19 patients experienced 27 serious AEs, equating to 18.6 serious AEs/100 patient-years of DR-HC exposure.ConclusionsThis long-term prospective trial is the first to document the safety of DR-HC in patients with primary AI and demonstrates that such treatment is well tolerated during 24 consecutive months of therapy.


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