| Literature DB >> 34735372 |
Alessandro Prete1,2, Richard J Auchus3, Richard J Ross4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with 21-hydroxylase deficiency congenital adrenal hyperplasia (21OHD-CAH) have poor health outcomes with increased mortality, short stature, impaired fertility, and increased cardiovascular risk factors such as obesity. To address this, there are therapies in development that target the clinical goal of treatment, which is to control excess androgens with an adrenal replacement dose of glucocorticoid.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34735372 PMCID: PMC8679847 DOI: 10.1530/EJE-21-0794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Endocrinol ISSN: 0804-4643 Impact factor: 6.664
Figure 1Pathophysiology of CAH due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency. Simplified representation of the steroid hormone biosynthesis, with a focus on androgen generation. 21-hydroxylase deficiency causes defective secretion of aldosterone and cortisol. The latter leads to excessive ACTH secretion from the pituitary, which results in adrenal androgen excess. Androgens can be generated through three pathways: the classic androgen pathway through DHEA; the 11-oxygenated androgen pathway through androstenedione (A4); and the alternative pathway to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) through androsterone. The alternative DHT pathway is active in the testis during male development in the foetus but not active in childhood and adults. The accumulation of 17OH-progesterone (17OHP) in CAH (circled in red) increases atypical conversion of 17OHP to A4 by CYP17A1 17,20-lyase activity, which physiologically has a much higher preference for the conversion of 17OH-pregnenolone to DHEA. Accumulating 17OHP also drives increased androgen production by the alternative DHT pathway, and increased A4 feeds enhanced 11-oxygenated androgen pathway activity. The classic pathway via DHEA is downregulated in CAH.
Figure 2Challenges of CAH treatment. The current standard of care for patients with CAH is glucocorticoid therapy, which targets both the cortisol deficiency and the adrenal androgen excess.
Figure 3Pharmacotherapies for CAH target different levels of the HPA axis. The hypothalamus controls ACTH release from the pituitary through CRF, and ACTH in turn stimulates cortisol release from the adrenal that feeds back at the hypothalamus and pituitary in a classic endocrine feedback loop.
Novel treatment strategies for congenital adrenal hyperplasia that are available for clinical use or currently undergoing clinical evaluation.
| Treatment | Administration | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| CRF1 receptor antagonists | |||
| Crinecerfont* | Oral, twice daily. | •Oral administration. | • Lack of long-term efficacy and safety data. |
| Tildacerfont* | Oral, once daily. | • Oral administration. | • Lack of long-term efficacy and safety data. |
| Glucocorticoid replacement | |||
| Modified-release hydrocortisone | Oral, once daily. | • Oral administration. | • Reduced bioavailability |
| Modified-release hydrocortisone (Efmody®; development name Chronocort) | • Oral, twice daily. | • Oral administration. | • Cannot be used for sick day dosing (patients should be provided with immediate-release glucocorticoid formulations, for example, hydrocortisone or cortisone acetate). |
| Hydrocortisone pump | Continuous s.c. infusion. | • Mimics the natural cortisol rhythm. | • Evidence derived from one small-scale study. |
| Alkindi® hydrocortisone granules (development name Infacort) | Oral, two to four times daily | • Oral administration. | • Does not replace overnight cortisol levels. |
| Acecort® hydrocortisone tablets | Oral, two to four times daily | • Oral administration. | • Does not replace overnight cortisol levels. |
| CYP17A1 inhibitor | |||
| Abiraterone acetate* | Oral, once daily. | • Oral administration. | • Need for concomitant glucocorticoid replacement. |
| Androgen receptor antagonist | |||
| Flutamide* | Oral, three times daily. | • Oral administration. | • Need for concomitant glucocorticoid ± aromatase inhibitor treatment. |
*Currently used in patients with 21OHD-CAH only as part of clinical trials.
Figure 4Effect of treatment with CRF1 receptor antagonists on CAH biomarkers. (A) Percentage fall in 17OHP and androstenedione (A4) after 14 days of Crinecerfont oral dosing: 50 mg at bedtime (n = 8), 100 mg at bedtime (n = 7), 100 mg once daily with an evening meal (n = 8), and 100 mg twice daily with meals (n = 8). (B) Percentage fall in 17OHP and A4 during Tildacerfont treatment in patients with poor control of CAH at baseline.
Figure 5Chronocort phase 3 and extension study. (A) 24-h profile of 17OHP levels at 24 weeks comparing titrated standard treatment and Chronocort showing that Chronocort improves morning control of 17OHP. (B and C) 24-h profiles of 17OHP and A4 at baseline and after 24 weeks showing that Chronocort normalizes 17OHP levels and this is associated with low levels of A4. (D) 9:00 h 17OHP levels during Chronocort treatment from the phase 3 through the 18 months extension study compared to median hydrocortisone dose showing that during the extension study the hydrocortisone dose came down to a median dose of 20 mg and control of 17OHP was maintained (note right y axis represents current hydrocortisone dose range used in patients with CAH). Hormone levels are shown as geometric mean ± 95% CI (adapted from Merke et al. (47)).