| Literature DB >> 29211058 |
Christina Tatsi1, Rebecca Boden1, Ninet Sinaii2, Meg Keil1, Charalampos Lyssikatos1, Elena Belyavskaya1, Sergio D Rosenzweig3, Constantine A Stratakis1, Maya B Lodish1.
Abstract
BackgroundHypercortisolemia results in changes of the immune system and elevated infection risk, but data on the WBC changes in pediatric Cushing syndrome (CS) are not known. We describe the changes of the WBC lineages in pediatric endogenous hypercortisolemia, their associations with the markers of disease severity, and the presence of infections.MethodsWe identified 197 children with endogenous CS. Clinical and biochemical data were recorded. Sixty-six children with similar age and gender, and normocortisolemia served as controls.ResultsThe absolute lymphocyte count of CS patients was significantly lower than that of controls, while the total WBC and the absolute neutrophil counts were significantly higher. These changes correlated with several markers of CS severity and improved after resolution of hypercortisolemia. Infections were identified in 35 patients (17.8%), and their presence correlated to elevated serum morning cortisol, midnight cortisol, and urinary free cortisol levels, as well as with the decrease in absolute lymphocyte count.ConclusionsChildren with endogenous CS have abnormal WBC counts, which correlate with the severity of CS, and normalize after cure. Infections are common in this population; clinicians should be aware of this complication of CS and have low threshold in diagnosis and treating infections in CS.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29211058 PMCID: PMC5866174 DOI: 10.1038/pr.2017.278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756
Clinical and biochemical characteristics of pediatric patients with Cushing syndrome.
| Characteristic | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| 12.5 (± 3.4) | ||
| 2.6 (± 1.8) | ||
| 88 (44.7) | ||
| 109 (55.3) | ||
| 9 (4.6) | ||
| 14 (7.1) | ||
| 5 (2.5) | ||
| 142 (72.1) | ||
| 27 (13.7) | ||
| 39 (19.8) | ||
| 155 (78.7) | ||
| 3 (1.5) | ||
| 20.4 (± 13.5) | ||
| 18.6 (± 13.2) | ||
| 399 (± 1465.1) | ||
| 154 (78.2) | ||
| 5 (2.5) | ||
| 38 (19.3) | ||
| 142 (72.1) | ||
| 8 (4.1) | ||
| 13 (6.6) | ||
| 34 (17.2) |
Figure 1Flowchart of the disease course of pediatric patients with Cushing syndrome (CS).
Total WBC and various WBC type counts for pediatric patients with Cushing syndrome and follow-up data at the time of diagnosis, after cure, and at time of recurrent hypercortisolemia.
| Characteristic | At diagnosis | After cure | p value | At remission for | At recurrence of | p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9.31 (± 2.55) | 6.83 (± 1.88) | 7.54 (± 2.57) | 9.77 (± 2.88) | |||
| 2.15 (± 0.78) | 2.88 (± 1.04) | 2.97 (± 1.71) | 2.29 (± 0.88) | |||
| 6.16 (± 2.34) | 3.25 (± 1.5) | 3.65 (±1.89) | 6.46 (± 2.70) | |||
| 0.11 (± 0.09) | 0.21 (± 0.16) | 0.25 (± 0.22) | 0.19 (± 0.23) | 0.079 | ||
| 0.037 (± 0.03) | 0.041 (± 0.03) | 0.051 (± 0.05) | 0.043 (± 0.04) | 0.353 | ||
| 0.82 (± 0.24) | 0.49 (± 0.19) | 0.60 (± 0.26) | 0.82 (± 0.36) | 0.086 |
Data are mean (± standard deviation).
statistically significant at p < 0.05
Corresponds to the comparison of the values at diagnosis with the corresponding values after cure (n=136 for the total WBC count and n=126 for the remaining tests).
Corresponds to the comparison of values at remission with the corresponding values at recurrence for the patients with recurrent hypercortisolemia (n=10).
Figure 2Scatterplots of the total WBC (a, b, c), absolute lymphocyte (d, e, f), and absolute neutrophil count (g, h, i), and their correlations with UFC (a, d, g), morning serum cortisol (b, e, h), and midnight serum cortisol (c, f, i) levels. Asterisk (*) indicates p < 0.05.
Figure 3Boxplot diagrams of the total absolute lymphocyte count (a), morning serum cortisol (b), midnight serum cortisol (c) and urinary free cortisol level (d) of the patients with infection compared to those without. All values were significantly different (p < 0.05) between the two groups (*).