| Literature DB >> 33036588 |
Rosemary Dineen1,2, Lucy-Ann Behan3, Grainne Kelleher4, Mark J Hannon5, Jennifer J Brady6, Bairbre Rogers5, Brian G Keevil7,8, William Tormey4, Diarmuid Smith5, Christopher J Thompson5, Malachi J McKenna6,9, Wiebke Arlt10,11, Paul M Stewart12, Amar Agha5, Mark Sherlock5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucocorticoid therapy is the most common cause of iatrogenic osteoporosis. Less is known regarding the effect of glucocorticoids when used as replacement therapy on bone remodelling in patients with adrenal insufficiency. Enhanced intracellular conversion of inactive cortisone to active cortisol, by 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1(11β-HSD1) and other enzymes leading to alterations in glucocorticoid metabolism, may contribute to a deleterious effect on bone health in this patient group.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenal insufficiency; Bone turnover markers; Cortisol; Cortisone; Hypopituitarism; Metabolites
Year: 2020 PMID: 33036588 PMCID: PMC7547490 DOI: 10.1186/s12902-020-00633-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Endocr Disord ISSN: 1472-6823 Impact factor: 2.763
Fig. 1Mean 24-h serum total cortisol (open circles) and cortisone (closed circles) profile in (a) Controls (b) Group A (c) Group B (d) Group C. Hydrocortisone doses given at 08.00 h and 16.00 h
Fig. 2(a) Area under the curve (AUC) cumulative exposure of 24-h serum cortisone (b) AUC day-time cumulative exposure of cortisone (c) AUC night-time cumulative exposure of cortisone in patient groups and controls. ns, not significant, p value> 0.05, *p value < 0.05, **p value < 0.01, ***p value< 0.001
Concentrations of bone turnover markers in patients and controls. Data are expressed as mean (standard deviation) or median (interquartile ranges)
| Dose A ( | Dose B ( | Dose C ( | Controls ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 54.9 (36.4–139.5) | 71.6 (42.9–126.7) | 102.4 (54.9–166.1) | 45.65 (37.8–30.2 | |
| 21.9 (19.1–42.3) | 26.3 (20.5–39.3) | 34.2 (23.7–43.4) | 18.6 (15.7–30.2) | |
| 16.5 (10.6) | 15.5 (7.9) | 14.4 (7.6) | 12.1 (3.5) | |
| 0.51 (0.29–0.96) | 0.47 (0.26–0.64) | 0.58 (0.29–0.84) | 0.32 (0.27–0.56) | |
| 2.92 (2.27–3.76) | 2.69 (2.27–3.53) | 2.76 (2.07–3.09) | 2.79 (2.64–2.97) | |
| 137 (43.5) | 181 (79.3) | 208 (56) | 136 (49.2) |
OC [1–49] = osteocalcin, PINP Procollagen type 1 peptide, Bone ALP Bone alkaline phosphatase, CTX-I C terminal cross-linking telopeptide, TRACP5b Tartrate resistant acid phosphatase 5b
Fig. 3Correlation between circulating serum cortisone in all patients on hydrocortisone replacement with; Bone formation markers (a) OC [1–49], (b) PINP, (c) Bone ALP and Bone resorption markers (d) CTX-I, (e) TRACP5b and (f) PINP: CTX ratio. OC [1–49] = osteocalcin; PINP = procollagen type 1 peptide; Bone ALP = bone alkaline phosphatase; CTX-I = C terminal cross-linking telopeptide; TRACP5b = tartrate resistant acid phosphatase 5b
Association of circulating serum cortisone (AUC) and total cortisol (AUC) with bone turnover markers in patients receiving hydrocortisone
| All patients on HC | Cortisone (AUC) | Cortisol (AUC) |
|---|---|---|
| −0.42, ( | − 0.57, ( | |
| −0.49, ( | −0.36, ( | |
| 0.05, ( | −0.06, ( | |
| −0.34, ( | −0.5, ( | |
| − 0.18, ( | −0.2323, ( | |
| − 0.39, ( | −0.4756, ( | |
HC Hydrocortisone, AUC Area under curve, OC [1–49] = osteocalcin, PINP Procollagen type 1 peptide, Bone ALP Bone alkaline phosphatase, CTX-I C terminal cross-linking telopeptide, TRACP5b Tartrate resistant acid phosphatase 5b
*p < 0.05
Association of circulating day-time and night-time serum cortisone (AUC) and total cortisol (AUC) with bone turnover markers in patients receiving hydrocortisone
| All patients on HC | Day-time Cortisone (AUC) | Day-time Cortisol (AUC) | Night-time Cortisone (AUC) | Night-time Cortisol (AUC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | −0.23, ( | −0.23, ( | −0.41, ( | −0.36, ( |
| | − 0.28, ( | −0.28, ( | −0.34, ( | −0.38, ( |
| | − 0.08, ( | −0.0778, ( | − 0.03, ( | 0.013, ( |
| | − 0.14, ( | −0.14, ( | −0.34, ( | −0.28, ( |
| | − 0.19, ( | −0.19, ( | 0.021, ( | −0.12, ( |
| | − 0.28, ( | −0.29, ( | −0.12, ( | −0.29, ( |
HC Hydrocortisone, AUC Area under curve, OC [1–49] = osteocalcin, PINP Procollagen type 1 peptide, Bone ALP Bone alkaline phosphatase, CTX-I C terminal cross-linking telopeptide, TRACP5b Tartrate resistant acid phosphatase 5b
*p < 0.05
Fig. 4Correlation between total urinary cortisol metabolites in all patients on HC replacement with; Bone formation markers (a) OC [1–49], (b) PINP, (c) Bone ALP and Bone resorption markers (d) CTX-I, (e) TRACP5b, (d) PINP: CTX ratio. Total urinary F metabolites = Total urinary cortisol metabolites; OC [1–49] = osteocalcin; PINP = procollagen type 1 peptide; Bone ALP = bone alkaline phosphatase; CTX-I = C terminal cross-linking telopeptide; TRACP5b = tartrate resistant acid phosphatase 5b
Association of urinary steroid metabolites with bone turnover markers in patients receiving hydrocortisone. Total urinary F metabolites = Total urinary cortisol metabolites; Andro = androsterone; Etio = etiocholanolone *p < 0.05
| All patients on HC replacement | Total urinary F metabolites | THF + aTHF /THE | UFF/UFE | 5a THF/THF | Andro/Etio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | −0.35, ( | − 0.12, ( | 0.09, ( | 0.35, ( | 0.5, ( |
| | −0.39, ( | −0.18, ( | 0.08, ( | 0.35, ( | 0.5, ( |
| | −0.02, ( | −0.18, ( | 0.29, ( | −0.07, ( | 0.13, ( |
| | −0.15, ( | −0.18, ( | 0.17, ( | 0.17, ( | 0.30, ( |
| | −0.14, ( | −0.31, ( | 0.18, ( | −0.8, ( | 0.18, ( |
| | −0.41, ( | −0.15, ( | − 0.04, ( | 0.37, ( | 0.58, ( |