Abstract

It has been suggested that comparison of posttest dexamethasone and cortisol concentrations may improve the evaluation of the dexamethasone suppression test (DST) for Cushing's syndrome. In particular, this would be reasonable if posttest cortisol differs by dexamethasone levels within the range that is usually attained in the DST. Using fractional polynomial regression, we therefore studied the association between posttest 0800 h dexamethasone and cortisol levels in 53 subjects without Cushing's syndrome who were tested with the 1 mg overnight DST. Plasma dexamethasone was associated with plasma cortisol (P<0.001), and the regression line suggested a strong negative association related to dexamethasone levels <5 nmol/l. However, among the 94% of subjects with plasma dexamethasone >5.0 nmol/l, there was no association between dexamethasone and cortisol levels (P=0.55). In conclusion, subjects tested with the 1 mg overnight DST usually attain an 0800 h plasma dexamethasone >5 nmol/l, and plasma cortisol does not differ by plasma dexamethasone in these subjects. This suggests that routine comparison of dexamethasone and cortisol levels may not be a useful approach to improve the performance of the 1 mg DST. However, dexamethasone measurements may identify subjects with inadequately low plasma dexamethasone and may therefore be of value when retesting subjects with possibly false-positive DST results.

Highlights

  • The 1 mg overnight dexamethasone suppression test (DST) is a common initial test for endogenous Cushing’s syndrome [1]

  • This suggestion would be reasonable if posttest cortisol differs by dexamethasone levels within the range that is usually attained in the DST

  • Among 45 subjects for whom body mass index (BMI; weight in kg divided by the squared value of height in meters) was available, we examined the association of BMI with plasma dexamethasone using linear regression and studied whether inclusion of BMI in the model influenced the association between dexamethasone and cortisol levels

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Summary

Introduction

The 1 mg overnight dexamethasone suppression test (DST) is a common initial test for endogenous Cushing’s syndrome [1]. It has been suggested that comparison of posttest dexamethasone and cortisol, e.g. by calculating an index of the two concentrations, may improve the evaluation of the DST [2, 3, 4, 5]. This suggestion would be reasonable if posttest cortisol differs by dexamethasone levels within the range that is usually attained in the DST. We have studied the association between dexamethasone and cortisol concentrations in subjects without Cushing’s syndrome who were tested with the 1 mg overnight DST

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