| Literature DB >> 34721304 |
Chris Worth1, Avni Vyas2, Indraneel Banerjee1,2, Wei Lin1, Julie Jones1, Helen Stokes1, Nicci Komlosy3, Steven Ball2,3, Peter Clayton1,2.
Abstract
Background: Adrenal Insufficiency (AI) can lead to life-threatening Adrenal Crisis (AC) and Adrenal Death (AD). Parents are trained to prevent, recognise and react to AC but there is little available information on what parents are actually doing at home to manage symptomatic AI.Entities:
Keywords: adrenal crisis; adrenal insufficiency; hydrocortisone; outcomes; socioeconomic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34721304 PMCID: PMC8548653 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.757566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Demographics of patients with AD.
| Characteristic | AI with AD n = 13 (%) | AI without AD n = 107 (%) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.415 | ||
| Male | 6 (46) | 56 (52) | |
| Female | 7 (54) | 51 (48) | |
|
| 0.342 | ||
| European | 7 (54) | 62 (58) | |
| South Asian | 2 (15) | 29 (27) | |
| African Caribbean | 1 (8) | 6 (5) | |
| Mixed Ethnicity | 1 (8) | 2 (2) | |
| Other | 0 (0) | 4 (4) | |
| Unknown | 2 (15) | 4 (4) | |
|
|
| ||
| CAH | 3 (23) | 45 (42) | |
| Hypopituitarism | 2 (15) | 49 (46) | |
| Secondary to steroid Rx | 1 (8) | 3 (3) | |
| Addison’s/auto-immune | 0 | 5 (5) | |
| Unspecified | 5 (38) | 4 (4) | |
| Other | 2 (8) | 1 (1) | |
CAH, Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia; P, P value for difference between groups calculated via Logistic regression. Nine patients did not have a specific diagnosis for the cause of their adrenal insufficiency.
*Results demonstrate a significant difference in underlying diagnoses between those with and without AD: CAH and Hypopituitarism are relatively underrepresented in the group with AD perhaps suggesting that those with an unclear diagnosis for their AI are at higher risk.
Figure 1Flowchart demonstrating numbers of patients identified at each stage of the study. Patient groups were compared at every stage to assess for differences. Results are provided in the manuscript and and .
Demographics of AI patients with and without AC.
| Characteristic | AI but no AC n = 89 (%) | AI with AC n = 38 (%) | P |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.50 | ||
| Male | 44 (49) | 22 (58) | |
| Female | 45 (51) | 16 (42) | |
|
| 0.99 | ||
| European | 50 (56) | 25 (66) | |
| South Asian | 26 (29) | 8 (21) | |
| African Caribbean | 5 (6) | 2 (5) | |
| Mixed ethnicity | 2 (2) | 1 (3) | |
| Not reported | 3 (3) | 1 (3) | |
| Other | 3 (3) | 1 (3) | |
|
| 0.95 | ||
| CAH | 41 (46) | 17 (45) | |
| Unspecified | 3 (3) | 4 (11) | |
| Hypopituitarism | 38 (43) | 13 (34) | |
| Addison’s/auto-immune | 4 (4) | 2 (5) | |
| No prior diagnosis of AI | 0 (0) | 1 (3) | |
| Secondary to steroid Rx | 2 (2) | 1 (3) | |
| Other | 1 (1) | 0 (0) | |
| IMD | 9797 | 14754 | 0.06 |
CAH = congenital adrenal hyperplasia. Rx = medication. IMD = Index of Multiple Deprivation Score. P = P value calculated via Logistic regression. There were no significant differences in gender, diagnosis, ethnicity or IMD score between groups with and without AC.
Symptoms of patients presenting to hospital with adrenal crisis.
| Symptom | Number (%) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Drowsiness | 14 (70) |
| Severe Lethargy | 10 (50) |
| Unrousable | 4 (20) |
|
| |
| Nausea and Vomiting | 15 (75) |
| Abdo pain | 5 (25) |
| Neurological | |
| Confusion | 4 (20) |
| Incoherent speech | 2 (10) |
| Convulsions | 2 (10) |
| Pyrexia | 11 (55%) |
n = 20. Pyrexia = parental reported “high temperature”. Abdo pain = parental reported “tummy pain”. As detailed in the manuscript, the most commonly reported symptoms were nausea and vomiting, reduced conscious level and pyrexia.
Figure 2Venn diagram of parent-reported symptoms. Most patients presented with overlapping symptoms and very few patients presented to hospital with an isolated symptom. Nausea/vomiting, pyrexia and drowsiness were the most common parent-reported symptoms.