Analysis of 24-h urinary steroid excretion was performed by capillary gas chromatography in six patients (five men, one woman) with adrenocortical insufficiency. Ten healthy subjects (five men, five women) served as controls. A complete absence of all 21-hydroxylated steroid metabolites was seen in patients with adrenocortical insufficiency, whereas the excretion of several steroids lacking hydroxylation in the 21-position (pregnenolone, pregnenetriol, and 11-ketoandrosterone) was markedly increased. In addition, the presence of 11 beta-hydroxyandrosterone was confirmed by mass-spectrometry in the urine of three patients. This pattern of steroid excretion was unchanged in patients with adrenocortical insufficiency, both after stimulation by 1-24 adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and after short-term (3-d) suppression with dexamethasone. We conclude that patients with adrenocortical insufficiency present a pattern of steroid excretion characterized by the absence of 21-hydroxylated metabolites. In the absence of functional adrenocortical tissue, long-term pathologically elevated concentrations of ACTH apparently stimulate early steps of steroid synthesis, most likely in the gonads. In addition, the presence of 11-hydroxylated steroid metabolites (11-ketoandrosterone, 11 beta-hydroxyandrosterone) in the urine of patients with adrenocortical insufficiency demonstrates that chronic ACTH excess in this disorder may induce some activity of 11 beta-hydroxylase, an enzyme not found in the gonads under physiological conditions.
H Vierhapper, P Nowotny, W Waldhäusl
The Editorial Board will only consider comments that are deemed relevant and of interest to readers. The Journal will not post data that have not been subjected to peer review; or a comment that is essentially a reiteration of another comment.