Abstract

Several substances with different inhibitory effects on adrenal steroid biosynthesis were investigated in patients with Cushing's syndrome. It has been shown that trilostane, a 3β-hydroxysteroid-dehydrogenase inhibitor, is not potent enough to block cortisol biosynthesis in patients with hypercortisolism. Aminoglutethimide inhibits side chain cleavage of cortisol synthesis, but it has been demonstrated that the blocking effect on cortisol secretion is not strong enough to normalize urinary cortisol excretion in patients with Cushing's disease. For metyrapone, an inhibitor of adrenal 11β-hydroxylase, promising results were reported for the treatment of Cushing's syndrome. However, the drug has several side effects and depending on the definition of the desired reduction of cortisol secretion a true remission was only found in a minority of patients. The antifungal drug ketoconazole in vitro predominantly blocks 17,20-desmolase (IC 50 1 μM) and to a lesser extent 17α-hydroxylase (IC 50 10 μM) and 11β-hydroxylase (IC 50 15–40 μM). Therefore, ketoconazole in vivo most potently suppresses androgen secretion and only to a lesser extent cortisol biosynthesis. Several therapeutic trials with ketoconazole treatment in patients with pituitary Cushing's disease showed various remission rates between 30 and 90%. In contrast, in almost all patients with benign, primary adrenal Cushing's syndrome cortisol levels were normalized. In patients with ectopic ACTH syndrome ketoconazole was effective in about 50% of all reported cases, while cortisol hypersecretion due to adrenocortical carcinoma was only rarely inhibited by ketoconazole. The main side effect of ketoconazole treatment was liver toxicity which occurred in 12% of all treated patients. In contrast to ketoconazole, the narcotic drug etomidate shows a strong inhibitory effect on 11β-hydroxylase (IC 50 0.03–0.15 μM) but only a weak inhibition of 17,20 desmolase (IC 50 380 μM). This correlates with in vivo studies where even low, non-hypnotic doses of etomidate induced a pronounced fall in serum cortisol levels in normals and in patients with Cushing's syndrome. However, its clinical use is limited by its mandatory intravenous application and its sedative effects. In conclusion, ketoconazole remains the only available steroid-inhibitory drug for a therapeutic trial in patients with Cushing's syndrome who cannot be treated definitively by surgery.

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