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Diagnosis and Treatment of Adrenal Insufficiency in the Critically Ill Patient


Author(s): Kwame Asare
doi: 10.1592/phco.27.11.1512
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  Pharmacotherapy
 
Print ISSN: 0277-0008
Volume: 27 | Issue: 11
Cover date: November 2007
Page(s): 1512-1528
 
 
  Key Words
 
adrenal insufficiency, sepsis, septic shock, corticosteroids, glucocorticoids, critically ill, intensive care unit, ICU, adrenocorticotropic hormone, ACTH, cortisol.
 
  Abstract

The reported incidence of adrenal insufficiency varies greatly depending on the population of critically ill patients studied, the test and cutoff levels used, and the severity of illness. Several studies have shown increased mortality in patients with very low or very high baseline cortisol levels. Manifestations of adrenal insufficiency in the critically ill patient are numerous and nonspecific, so clinicians are urged to have a high index of suspicion and be alert to important diagnostic clues, such as hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, and hypotension, that are refractory to fluids and vasopressors without any clear causation. Multiple tests have been developed to diagnose adrenal insufficiency, but the most commonly used test in the intensive care unit is the adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulation test. The low-dose ACTH stimulation test has been shown to be more sensitive and specific than the high-dose test; however, the high-dose test is preferred since the low-dose test has not been validated. Although diagnosing adrenal insufficiency continues to be difficult in the critically ill patient, administration of highdose corticosteroids, defined as methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg/day or more (or its equivalent), over a short period of time provides no overall benefit and may even be harmful; however, administration of low-dose corticosteroids for a longer duration decreases both the amount of the time that vasopressors are required and mortality at 28 days. Hydrocortisone 200–300 mg/day, administered in divided doses or as a continuous infusion, is the preferred corticosteroid in patients with septic shock and should be started as early as possible. For patients in whom the ACTH stimulation test cannot be given immediately, clinicians are urged to consider using dexamethasone until such time that the test can be administered, since, unlike hydrocortisone, it does not interfere with the cortisol test.

 
  Author(s) affiliations
 
1Pharmacy Department, St. Thomas Hospital, Nashville, Tennessee.
* Address reprint requests to Kwame Asare, Pharm.D., BCPS, BCNSP, St. Thomas Hospital, Pharmacy Department, 4220 Harding Road, Nashville, TN 37202