ObjectiveTo evaluate if cortisol responses to 250 µg of intravenously
administered adrenocorticotropic hormone are related to disease severity
and, hence, mortality. MethodsThis is a retrospective study in a medical-surgical intensive care unit of a
university hospital. We studied 69 consecutive patients with septic shock
over a 1-yr period; these patients underwent a short 250-µg
adrenocorticotropic hormone test because they exhibited >6 hours of
progressive hemodynamic instability requiring repeated fluid challenges and
vasopressor treatment to maintain blood pressure. The test was performed by
intravenously injecting 250 µg of synthetic adrenocorticotropic
hormone and measuring cortisol immediately before injection, 30 minutes
post-injection and 60 minutes post-injection. ResultsThe mean APACHE II score was 22±7. The intensive care unit mortality
rate at day 28 was 55%. Median baseline cortisol levels (19
[11-27] µg/dL versus 24
[18-34] µg/dL, p=0.047) and median baseline
cortisol/albumin ratios (7.6 [4.6-12.3]
versus 13.9 [8.8-18.5]; p=0.01) were
lower in survivors than in non-survivors. Responders and non-responders had
similar baseline clinical data and outcomes. The variables that were
significantly correlated with outcome based on the area under the ROC curves
(AUC) were APACHE II (AUC=0.67 [0.535 to 0.781]), baseline
cortisol (µg/dl) (AUC=0.662 [0.536 to 0.773], peak
cortisol (µg/dl) (AUC=0.642 [0.515 to 0.755]) and
baseline cortisol/albumin (AUC=0.75 [0.621 to 0.849]). ConclusionsIncreased basal cortisol is associated with mortality and disease severity.
Cortisol responses upon adrenocorticotropic hormone stimulation were not
related to outcome. The cortisol/albumin ratio does not predict unfavorable
outcomes better than total cortisol levels or help to improve the accuracy
of the adrenocorticotropic hormone test.
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