Abstract

Impaired growth is common in patients with glycogen storage disease (GSD), who also may have “cherubic” facies similar to the “moon” facies of Cushing syndrome (CS). An infant presented with moon facies, growth failure, and obesity. Laboratory evaluation of the hypothalamic‐pituitary‐adrenal (HPA) axis was consistent with CS. He was subsequently found to have liver disease, hypoglycemia, and a pathogenic variant in PHKA2, leading to the diagnosis of GSD type IXa. The cushingoid appearance, poor linear growth and hypercortisolemia improved after treatment to prevent recurrent hypoglycemia. We suspect this child's HPA axis activation was “appropriate” and caused by chronic hypoglycemic stress, leading to increased glucocorticoid secretion that may have contributed to his poor growth and excessive weight gain. This is in contrast to typical CS, which is due to excessive adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) or cortisol secretion from neoplastic pituitary or adrenal glands, ectopic secretion of ACTH or corticotropin‐releasing hormone (CRH), or exogenous administration of corticosteroid or ACTH. Pseudo‐CS is a third cause of excessive glucocorticoid secretion, has no HPA axis pathology, is most often associated with underlying psychiatric disorders or obesity in children and, by itself, is thought to be benign. We speculate that some diseases, including chronic hypoglycemic disorders such as the GSDs, may have biochemical features and pathologic consequences of CS. We propose that excessive glucocorticoid secretion due to chronic stress be termed “stress‐induced Cushing (SIC) syndrome” to distinguish it from the other causes of CS and pseudo‐CS, and that evaluation of children with chronic hypoglycemia and poor statural growth include evaluation for CS.

Highlights

  • Children with undiagnosed hepatic glycogen storage disease (GSD) are classically characterized by “cherubic” facies and impaired growth.[1–3] Short stature in patients with GSD has been correlated with plasma cortisol levels[1,3] but potential overlap with Cushing syndrome (CS) has not been investigated.Typically, CS is due to abnormally increased hormone secretion from neoplastic pituitary (ACTH) or adrenal glands, ectopic secretion of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and/or corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), or administration of excessive corticosteroid or ACTH.[4]

  • Synopsis Hypercortisolemia and other features of Cushing syndrome were present in a patient with unsuspected glycogen storage disease type IXa and chronic hypoglycemia, which we propose caused chronic activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis leading to a form of Cushing syndrome, which we term “stressinduced Cushing syndrome (SIC)”

  • We describe an infant who presented with growth failure, abnormal weight gain, moon facies, and hypercortisolism, who was diagnosed with Type IXa GSD

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Summary

Introduction

Children with undiagnosed hepatic glycogen storage disease (GSD) are classically characterized by “cherubic” facies and impaired growth.[1–3] Short stature in patients with GSD has been correlated with plasma cortisol levels[1,3] but potential overlap with Cushing syndrome (CS) has not been investigated.Typically, CS is due to abnormally increased hormone secretion from neoplastic pituitary (ACTH) or adrenal (cortisol) glands, ectopic secretion of ACTH and/or CRH, or administration of excessive corticosteroid or ACTH.[4]. This activation is a physiologically appropriate counter-regulatory response, it may have pathologic consequences that contribute to the GSD phenotype of growth failure and obesity, leading us to propose it as a novel type of CS, which we term “stressinduced Cushing (SIC) syndrome”.

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