Abstract

Plasma 21-deoxycorticosterone (21-DB) concentrations were measured before (basal) and 1 h after ACTH stimulation in a population of 34 normal subjects, 18 patients with the late-onset form of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (LO-CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency, and 19 LOCAH heterozygotes. For comparison, plasma 21-deoxycortisol (21-DOF) and 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) were determined simultaneously in the same subjects. Plasma 21-DB concentrations as well as those of 21-DOF did not vary significantly as a function of age, sex, or phase of the menstrual cycle, in contrast to plasma 17-OHP. The mean plasma 21-DB concentrations in normal subjects (adult men, follicular and luteal phase women, and children) were 19.0 +/- 9.5 (+/- SD) pmol/L before and 73.2 +/- 31.0 after ACTH stimulation. In the LOCAH patient group, the mean post-ACTH plasma 21-DB concentration was 1736.0 +/- 1243.0 pmol/L, and all values were above the highest post-ACTH value (148.2 pmol/L) in the normal subjects. Similarly, in the LOCAH patients the post-ACTH plasma 21-DOF concentration was 33.7 +/- 20.3 nmol/L, and the post-ACTH plasma 17-OHP value was 134.0 +/- 70.6 nmol/L; all LOCAH patients had supranormal responses to ACTH. However, 38.9%, 11.2% and 16.7% of the basal plasma 21-DB, 21-DOF, and 17-OHP values in the LOCAH patients overlapped those in the normal subjects. There was a rather large overlap (63.2%) in post-ACTH plasma 21-DB levels between the LOCAH heterozygotes and the normal subjects; it was less than the overlap in plasma 17-OHP (74%) and more than the overlap in plasma 21-DOF values (5.2%) in these same 2 groups. There was moderate overlap (21%) in the post-ACTH plasma 21-DB levels between the LOCAH heterozygotes and LOCAH patients, but no overlap between these 2 groups for either 21-DOF or 17-OHP. The abnormally elevated post-ACTH plasma 21-DB levels found in all the LOCAH patients as well as in some LOCAH heterozygotes suggest the existence of minor 21-hydroxylase deficiency in the mineralocorticoid synthetic pathway in these patients in addition to the well known impairment in the glucocorticoid pathway demonstrated by the elevated post-ACTH 21-DOF and 17-OHP levels.

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