Recalibration of thinking about adrenocortical function assessment : how the 'random' cortisol relates to the short synacthen test results
Author
Michaelidou, MariaYadegarfar, Ghasem
Morris, Lauren
Dolan, Samantha
Robinson, Adam
Naseem, Asma
Livingston, Mark
Duff, Chris J
Trainer, Peter
Fryer, Anthony A
Heald, Adrian H
Affiliation
Salford Royal Hospital; University of Manchester; Isfahan University of Medical Sciences; Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust; Isfahan University of Medical Sciences; Keele University; Christie NHS Foundation TrustPublication date
2021-04-12
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: The short synacthen test (SST) is the most commonly performed investigation to assess adrenal function. Appropriate criteria for when an SST is performed are subject to debate. We investigated how random serum cortisol levels relate to SST response. Methods: We examined random cortisol measurements taken between 04.40-23.55 p.m. results of SST baseline and 30-/60-min cortisol performed over 12 months (225 SSTs) at Salford Royal Hospital. Serum cortisol was measured on the Siemens Centaur Analyser.A 30-60-min cortisol concentration of ≥450 nmol/L defined a pass; 350-449 nmol/L defined borderline. Results: Patients only proceeded to SST if random cortisol was <400 nmol/L. For those not on corticosteroids for at least 2 weeks, 42/43 (97.7%) cases with random cortisol concentration of ≥200 nmol/L had an SST 'pass'. The relation was less clear with corticosteroid treatment (19/35 cases; 54%).For those not taking glucocorticoid treatment (including inhaled/topical corticosteroids) in the previous 2 weeks, 91.8% of SSTs were pass/2.7% borderline/5.5% fail. For those on steroids, 51.9% of SSTs were a pass/11.4% were borderline.In relation to the postsynacthen cortisol pass cut-off of ≥450 nmol/L, in 15/207 (7.2%) of cases, the 60-min cortisol was ≥450 nmol/L (adequate adrenocortical function), but 30-min cortisol was below this. In all cases where the 30-min cortisol did indicate a pass (i.e. was ≥450 nmol/L) the 60-min cortisol was also ≥450 nmol/L. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that if the random cortisol level is ≥200 nmol/L, regardless of the time of day and the person was not taking corticosteroid treatment in the previous 2 weeks, SST may not be needed. Our data also suggests that 60-min cortisol retains utility.Citation
Michaelidou M, Yadegarfar G, Morris L, Dolan S, Robinson A, Naseem A, Livingston M, Duff CJ, Trainer P, Fryer AA, Heald AH. Recalibration of thinking about adrenocortical function assessment: how the 'random' cortisol relates to the short synacthen test results. Cardiovasc Endocrinol Metab. 2021 Apr 12;10(2):137-145.Type
ArticlePMID
34113799Publisher
Lippincott, Williams & Wilkinsae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1097/XCE.0000000000000250