 |
Cushings Syndrome
|
|
|
Introduction |
Cushing's syndrome is a hormonal
disorder caused by prolonged exposure of the body's tissues to
high levels of the hormone cortisol. Sometimes called
"hypercortisolism," it is relatively rare and most commonly
affects adults aged 20 to 50. An estimated 10 to 15 of every
million people are affected each year.
|
What Are the Symptoms? |
Symptoms vary, but most people have upper body obesity, rounded
face, increased fat around the neck, and thinning arms and legs.
Children tend to be obese with slowed growth rates.
Other symptoms appear in the skin, which becomes fragile and
thin. It bruises easily and heals poorly. Purplish pink
stretch marks may appear on the abdomen, thighs, buttocks, arms
and breasts. The bones are weakened, and routine activities
such as bending, lifting or rising from a chair may lead to
backaches, rib and spinal column fractures.
Most people have severe fatigue, weak muscles, high blood
pressure and high blood sugar. Irritability, anxiety and
depression are common.
Women usually have excess hair growth on their faces, necks,
chests, abdomens, and thighs. Their menstrual periods may
become irregular or stop. Men have decreased fertility with
diminished or absent desire for sex.
|
What Causes Cushing's Syndrome? |
Cushing's syndrome occurs when the body's tissues are exposed to
excessive levels of cortisol for long periods of time. Many
people suffer the symptoms of Cushing's syndrome because they
take glucocorticoid hormones such as prednisone for asthma,
rheumatoid arthritis, lupus or other inflammatory diseases.
Others develop Cushing's syndrome because of overproduction of
cortisol by the body. Normally, the production of cortisol
follows a precise chain of events. First, the hypothalamus, a
part of the brain which is about the size of a small sugar cube,
sends corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) to the pituitary
gland. CRH causes the pituitary to secrete ACTH
(adrenocorticotropin), a hormone that stimulates the adrenal
glands. When the adrenals, which are located just above the
kidneys, receive the ACTH, they respond by releasing cortisol
into the bloodstream.
Cortisol performs vital tasks in the body. It helps maintain
blood pressure and cardiovascular function, reduces the immune
system's inflammatory response, balances the effects of insulin
in breaking down sugar for energy, and regulates the metabolism
of proteins, carbohydrates, and fats. One of cortisol's most
important jobs is to help the body respond to stress. For this
reason, women in their last 3 months of pregnancy and highly
trained athletes normally have high levels of the hormone.
People suffering from depression, alcoholism, malnutrition and
panic disorders also have increased cortisol levels.
When the amount of cortisol in the blood is adequate, the
hypothalamus and pituitary release less CRH and ACTH. This
ensures that the amount of cortisol released by the adrenal
glands is precisely balanced to meet the body's daily needs.
However, if something goes wrong with the adrenals or their
regulating switches in the pituitary gland or the hypothalamus,
cortisol production can go awry.
Pituitary Adenomas
Pituitary adenomas cause most cases of Cushing's syndrome. They
are benign, or non-cancerous, tumors of the pituitary gland
which secrete increased amounts of ACTH. Most patients have a
single adenoma. This form of the syndrome, known as "Cushing's
disease," affects women five times more frequently than men.
Ectopic ACTH Syndrome
Some benign or malignant (cancerous) tumors that arise outside
the pituitary can produce ACTH. This condition is known as
ectopic ACTH syndrome. Lung tumors cause over 50 percent of
these cases. Men are affected 3 times more frequently than
women. The most common forms of ACTH-producing tumors are oat
cell, or small cell lung cancer, which accounts for about 25
percent of all lung cancer cases, and carcinoid tumors. Other
less common types of tumors that can produce ACTH are thymomas,
pancreatic islet cell tumors, and medullary carcinomas of the
thyroid.
Adrenal Tumors
Sometimes, an abnormality of the adrenal glands, most often an
adrenal tumor, causes Cushing's syndrome. The average age of
onset is about 40 years. Most of these cases involve
non-cancerous tumors of adrenal tissue, called adrenal adenomas,
which release excess cortisol into the blood.
Adrenocortical carcinomas, or adrenal cancers, are the least
common cause of Cushing's syndrome. Cancer cells secrete excess
levels of several adrenal cortical hormones, including cortisol
and adrenal androgens. Adrenocortical carcinomas usually cause
very high hormone levels and rapid development of symptoms.
Familial Cushing's Syndrome
Most cases of Cushing's syndrome are not inherited. Rarely,
however, some individuals have special causes of Cushing's
syndrome due to an inherited tendency to develop tumors of one
or more endocrine glands. In Primary Pigmented Micronodular
Adrenal Disease, children or young adults develop small
cortisol-producing tumors of the adrenal glands.
In Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type I (MEN I), hormone
secreting tumors of the parathyroid glands, pancreas and
pituitary occur. Cushing's syndrome in MEN I may be due to
pituitary, ectopic or adrenal tumors.
|
How Is Cushing's Syndrome
Diagnosed? |
Diagnosis is based on a review of the patient's medical history,
physical examination and laboratory tests. Often x-ray exams of
the adrenal or pituitary glands are useful for locating tumors.
These tests help to determine if excess levels of cortisol are
present and why.
24-Hour Urinary Free Cortisol Level
This is the most specific diagnostic test. The patient's urine
is collected over a 24-hour period and tested for the amount of
cortisol. Levels higher than 50-100 micrograms a day for an
adult suggest Cushing's syndrome. The normal upper limit varies
in different laboratories, depending on which measurement
technique is used.
Once Cushing's syndrome has been diagnosed, other tests are used
to find the exact location of the abnormality that leads to
excess cortisol production. The choice of test depends, in
part, on the preference of the endocrinologist or the center
where the test is performed.
Dexamethasone Suppression Test
This test helps to distinguish patients with excess production
of ACTH due to pituitary adenomas from those with ectopic
ACTH-producing tumors. Patients are given dexamethasone, a
synthetic glucocorticoid, by mouth every 6 hours for 4 days.
For the first 2 days, low doses of dexamethasone are given, and
for the last 2 days, higher doses are given. Twenty-four hour
urine collections are made before dexamethasone is administered
and on each day of the test. Since cortisol and other
glucocorticoids signal the pituitary to lower secretion of ACTH,
the normal response after taking dexamethasone is a drop in
blood and urine cortisol levels. Different responses of
cortisol to dexamethasone are obtained depending on whether the
cause of Cushing's syndrome is a pituitary adenoma or an ectopic
ACTH-producing tumor.
The dexamethasone suppression test can produce false-positive
results in patients with depression, alcohol abuse, high
estrogen levels, acute illness, and stress. Conversely, drugs
such as phenytoin and phenobarbital may cause false-negative
results in response to dexamethasone suppression. For this
reason, patients are usually advised by their physicians to stop
taking these drugs at least one week before the test.
CRH Stimulation Test
This test helps to distinguish between patients with pituitary
adenomas and those with ectopic ACTH syndrome or
cortisol-secreting adrenal tumors. Patients are given an
injection of CRH, the corticotropin-releasing hormone which
causes the pituitary to secrete ACTH. Patients with pituitary
adenomas usually experience a rise in blood levels of ACTH and
cortisol. This response is rarely seen in patients with ectopic
ACTH syndrome and practically never in patients with
cortisol-secreting adrenal tumors.
Direct Visualization of the Endocrine Glands (Radiologic
Imaging)
Imaging tests reveal the size and shape of the pituitary and
adrenal glands and help determine if a tumor is present. The
most common are the CT (computerized tomography) scan and MRI
(magnetic resonance imaging). A CT scan produces a series of
x-ray pictures giving a cross-sectional image of a body part.
MRI also produces images of the internal organs of the body but
without exposing the patient to
ionizing radiation.
Imaging procedures are used to find a tumor after a diagnosis
has been established. Imaging is not used to make the diagnosis
of Cushing's syndrome because benign tumors, sometimes called
"incidentalomas," are commonly found in the pituitary and
adrenal glands. These tumors do not produce hormones
detrimental to health and are not removed unless blood tests
show they are a cause of symptoms or they are unusually large.
Conversely, pituitary tumors are not detected by imaging in
almost 50 percent of patients who ultimately require pituitary
surgery for Cushing's syndrome.
Petrosal Sinus Sampling
This test is not always required, but in many cases, it is the
best way to separate pituitary from ectopic causes of Cushing's
syndrome. Samples of blood are drawn from the petrosal sinuses,
veins which drain the pituitary, by introducing catheters
through a vein in the upper thigh/groin region, with local
anesthesia and mild sedation. X-rays are used to confirm the
correct position of the catheters. Often CRH, the hormone which
causes the pituitary to secrete ACTH, is given during this test
to improve diagnostic accuracy. Levels of ACTH in the petrosal
sinuses are measured and compared with ACTH levels in a forearm
vein. ACTH levels higher in the petrosal sinuses than in the
forearm vein indicate the presence of a pituitary adenoma;
similar levels suggest ectopic ACTH syndrome.
The Dexamethasone-CRH Test
Some individuals have high cortisol levels, but do not develop
the progressive effects of Cushing's syndrome, such as muscle
weakness, fractures and thinning of the skin. These individuals
may have Pseudo Cushing's syndrome, which was originally
described in people who were depressed or drank excess alcohol,
but is now known to be more common. Pseudo Cushing's does not
have the same long-term effects on health as Cushing's syndrome
and does not require treatment directed at the endocrine glands.
Although observation over months to years will distinguish
Pseudo Cushing's from Cushing's, the dexamethasone-CRH test was
developed to distinguish between the conditions rapidly, so that
Cushing's patients can receive prompt treatment. This test
combines the dexamethasone suppression and the CRH stimulation
tests. Elevations of cortisol during this test suggest
Cushing's syndrome.
Some patients may have sustained high cortisol levels without
the effects of Cushing's syndrome. These high cortisol levels
may be compensating for the body's resistance to cortisol's
effects. This rare syndrome of cortisol resistance is a genetic
condition that causes hypertension and chronic androgen
excess.
Sometimes other conditions may be associated with many of the
symptoms of Cushing's syndrome. These include polycystic
ovarian syndrome, which may cause menstrual disturbances, weight
gain from adolescence, excess hair growth and sometimes impaired
insulin action and diabetes. Commonly, weight gain, high blood
pressure and abnormal levels of cholesterol and triglycerides in
the blood are associated with resistance to insulin action and
diabetes; this has been described as the "Metabolic Syndrome-X."
Patients with these disorders do not have abnormally elevated
cortisol levels.
|
How Is Cushing's Syndrome
Treated? |
Treatment depends on the specific reason for cortisol excess and
may include surgery, radiation, chemotherapy or the use of
cortisol-inhibiting drugs. If the cause is long-term use of
glucocorticoid hormones to treat another disorder, the doctor
will gradually reduce the dosage to the lowest dose adequate for
control of that disorder. Once control is established, the
daily dose of glucocorticoid hormones may be doubled and given
on alternate days to lessen side effects.
Pituitary Adenomas
Several therapies are available to treat the ACTH-secreting
pituitary adenomas of Cushing's disease. The most widely used
treatment is surgical removal of the tumor, known as
transsphenoidal adenomectomy. Using a special microscope and
very fine instruments, the surgeon approaches the pituitary
gland through a nostril or an opening made below the upper lip.
Because this is an extremely delicate procedure, patients are
often referred to centers specializing in this type of surgery.
The success, or cure, rate of this procedure is over 80 percent
when performed by a surgeon with extensive experience. If
surgery fails, or only produces a temporary cure, surgery can be
repeated, often with good results. After curative pituitary
surgery, the production
of ACTH drops two levels below normal. This is a natural, but
temporary, drop in ACTH production, and patients are given a
synthetic form of cortisol (such as hydrocortisone or
prednisone). Most patients can stop this replacement therapy in
less than a year.
For patients in whom transsphenoidal surgery has failed or who
are not suitable candidates for surgery, radiotherapy is another
possible treatment. Radiation to the pituitary gland is given
over a 6-week period, with improvement occurring in 40 to 50
percent of adults and up to 80 percent of children. It may take
several months or years before patients feel better from
radiation treatment alone. However, the combination of
radiation and the drug mitotane (Lysodren®) can help speed
recovery. Mitotane suppresses cortisol production and lowers
plasma and urine hormone levels. Treatment with mitotane alone
can be successful in 30 to 40 percent of patients. Other drugs
used alone or in combination to control the production of excess
cortisol are aminoglutethimide, metyrapone, trilostane and
ketoconazole. Each has its own side effects that doctors
consider when prescribing therapy for individual patients.
Ectopic ACTH Syndrome
To cure the overproduction of cortisol caused by ectopic ACTH
syndrome, it is necessary to eliminate all of the cancerous
tissue that is secreting ACTH. The choice of cancer
treatment--surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy,
or a combination of these treatments--depends on the type of
cancer and how far it has spread. Since ACTH-secreting tumors
(for example, small cell lung cancer) may be very small or
widespread at the time of diagnosis, cortisol-inhibiting drugs,
like mitotane, are an important part of treatment. In some
cases, if pituitary surgery is not successful, surgical removal
of the adrenal glands (bilateral adrenalectomy) may take the
place of drug therapy.
Adrenal Tumors
Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for benign as well as
cancerous tumors of the adrenal glands. In Primary Pigmented
Micronodular Adrenal Disease and the familial Carney's complex,
surgical removal of the adrenal glands is required.
|
What Research Is Being Done on Cushing's
Syndrome? |
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is the biomedical
research component of the Federal Government. It is one of the
health agencies of the Public Health Service, which is part of
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Several
components of the NIH conduct and support research on Cushing's
syndrome and other disorders of the endocrine system, including
the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases (NIDDK), the National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development (NICHD), the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), and the National
Cancer Institute (NCI).
NIH-supported scientists are conducting intensive research into
the normal and abnormal function of the major endocrine glands
and the many hormones of the endocrine system. Identification
of the corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH), which instructs
the pituitary gland to release ACTH, enabled researchers to
develop the CRH stimulation test, which
is increasingly being used to identify the cause of Cushing's
syndrome.
Improved techniques for measuring ACTH permit distinction of
ACTH-dependent forms of Cushing's syndrome from adrenal tumors.
NIH studies have shown that petrosal sinus sampling is a very
accurate test to diagnose the cause of Cushing's syndrome in
those who have excess ACTH production. The recently described
dexamethasone suppression-CRH test is able to differentiate most
cases of Cushing's from Pseudo Cushing's.
As a result of this research, doctors are much better able to
diagnose Cushing's syndrome and distinguish among the causes of
this disorder. Since accurate diagnosis is still a problem for
some patients, new tests are under study to further refine the
diagnostic process.
Many studies are underway to understand the causes of formation
of benign endocrine tumors, such as those which cause most cases
of Cushing's syndrome. In a few pituitary adenomas, specific
gene defects have been identified and may provide important
clues to understanding tumor formation. Endocrine factors may
also play a role. There is increasing evidence that tumor
formation is a multi-step process. Understanding the basis of
Cushing's syndrome will yield new approaches to therapy.
NIH supports research related to Cushing's syndrome at medical
centers throughout the United States. Scientists are also
treating patients with Cushing's syndrome at the NIH Warren
Grant Magnuson Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.
Physicians who are interested in referring a patient may contact
Dr. George P. Chrousos, Developmental Endocrinology Branch,
NICHD, Building 10, Room 10N262, Bethesda, Maryland 20892,
telephone (301) 496-4686.
|
Where Can I Find More
Information? |
The following materials can be found in medical libraries, many
college and university libraries, and through interlibrary loan
in most public libraries.
Cooper, Paul R. "Contemporary Diagnosis and Management of
Pituitary Adenomas," Park Ridge, Illinois: American Association
of Neurological Surgeons, 1991.
DeGroot, Leslie J., ed., et al. "Cushing's Syndrome,"
Endocrinology. Vol. 2, Philadelphia: W. B.
Saunders Company, 1995. 1741-1769.
Isselbacher, Kurt J., ed., et al. "Cushing's Syndrome
Etiology," Harrison's Principles of Internal
Medicine. Vol. 2, No. 13, New York: McGraw-Hill Book
Company, 1994. 1960-1965.
Wilson, Jean D., ed, et al. "Hyperfunction:
Glucocorticoids: Hypercortisolism (Cushing's syndrome),"
Williams Textbook of Endocrinology, No. 8,
Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1992; 536-562.
Conn, R.B., Gomez, T., Chrousos, G.P., "Current Diagnosis," No.
8, Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders 1991, 868-872.
NCI Research Report: Cancer of the Lung. Prepared by the Office
of Cancer Communications, National Cancer Institute, NIH
Publication No. 93-526.
|
What Other Resources Are
Available? |
Cushing's Support and Research Foundation, Inc.
65 East India Row 22B
Boston, Massachusetts 02110
(617) 723-3824 or (617) 723-3674
Louise L. Pace, Founder and President
Pituitary Tumor Network Association
16350 Ventura Blvd. #231
Encino, CA 91436
(805) 499-9973
Fax: (805) 499-1523 |
|
|
|