Title: Steroids in critical illness
1Steroids in critical illness
- Mark Daly
- Consultant Endocrinologist
- Exeter
2This talk
- A challenging case
- HPA axis insufficiency in traumatic brain injury
- Diagnosing corticosteroid deficiency in the
critical ill patient - Different approaches
- Controversies
- Understanding the pathophysiology
- Towards a sensible consensus
- Role of corticosteroid use in the ITU setting
- Concept of relative adrenal insufficiency
- Failure of response to conventional vasopressor
interventions - Conclusions
3LG, 55
- 48 yr F, presents with collapse, recent
diarrhoeal illness - BP 70/40
- 39.5 oc
- Swollen inflamed wrist
- CRP 295, WCC 24, creatinine 295, bicarb 10
- Na 107, K 6.2
4LG, 55
- Admitted to ITU
- Baseline serum taken
- Put on steroids
- Endocrinology consult requested
5LG, 55
- Random cortisol 2
- No ACTH
- LH 55, FSH 72
- PRL 450, TSH 2.9, FT4 18
6LG, 55, PMH
- Thyroid eye disease
- Treated thyrotoxicosis
- Recent uncontrolled hypertension
- Manic depression
- Anti-phospholipid syndrome
7LG, 55
- Differential diagnosis?
- Primary hypoadrenalism
- Supported by UEs, but other explanations
- But recently hypertensive so NOT slow onset
- Secondary hypoadrenalism
- Why such striking preservation of other pituitary
hormones? - ?false cortisol result
- ?severe electrolyte loss
- Acute total hypoadrenalism?
8LG, 55
9LG, 55
- Clinical diagnosis of bilateral acute adrenal
infarction confirmed by CT - Exacerbation of mania caused by higher dose
steroids - Subsequent hyponatraemia caused by excessive
water drinking (due to mania) then Addisonian
crisis (omitting steroids)
10HPA axis insufficiency in traumatic brain injury
- TBI leading cause of death and disability in
young adults - Autopsies have shown up to pituitary gland
necrosis in one-third of patients
11HPA axis insufficiency in traumatic brain injury
- Beaumont Hospital Dublin
- 102 neuro-surgical survivors
- Broad-spectrum of AP testing, limited by risk of
ITT - 28.4 had at least one AP hormone deficiency
- 10 were ACTH deficient
- Thus
- Clear evidence of pituitary dysfunction as a
result of acute injury persisting long-term - BUT
- Is this an acute phenomenon?
- J Clin Endo Metab 894929, 2004
12HPA axis insufficiency in acute traumatic brain
injury
- 50 patients with severe or moderate brain injury
31 matched controls, median 12 days post injury - Glucagon stimulation test
- Peak cortisol lt450 in 16
- (80 had gonadotrophin deficiency with low sex
steroids) - No reference to free cortisol or albumin levels
- Thus in acute phase of brain injury there is
evidence of pituitary dysfunction - Clin Endo (Oxf) 2004 60584-91
13More difficult territory
14Diagnosing adrenal/pituitary insufficiency in
critically ill patients
- Sometimes it feels like late-onset hypogonadism!
- Why?
- Because someone is trying to diagnose a disease
without a clear pathogenesis and borderline
results (and equally borderline treatment
responses)
15A review of physiology
16The simple approach
17The complex approach
18The clinical approach in sickness and in health
- Autonomic nervous system modulates CRH release by
hypothalamus - CRH stimulates ACTH release from anterior
pituitary - ACTH stimulates cortisol synthesis (plus
aldosterone and DHEA) - Feedback of cortisol to ACTH and CRH
- Vasopressin stimulates ACTH secretion in the
presence of CRH
19The clinical approach in sickness and in health
- IL-1, IL-6, MIF and TNF-alpha promote high
corticosteroid levels - IL-6 receptors seen on pituitary corticotrophs
and adrenal cortical cells - Effect in addition to classical pathway
activation - Impaired clearance of steroid (esp renal/hepatic
disease
- Steroid in excess of Cushings AND less
suppressible - (best seen in neuro-surgical patients where 24mg
dexamethasone does not suppress endogenous
production) - BUT individual variation in response to stress
- (MIF macrophage migratory inhibitory factor)
20So
- Strong, unsuppressible cortisol secretion in
stress suggests this is an adaptive response - So inadequate response suggests failure and
indication for high-dose steroids? - AND resistance to gluco-corticoid action may be
present despite a strong response?
21Evidence for HPA axis failure in critical illness
- Published data cover very heterogeneous groups
- Many with severe sepsis
22Hypoadrenalism in septic shock
J Clin Endo Metab 2006,913725-45
23Hypoadrenalism in septic shock
- Conclusions from small studies - small
increments more likely to die (but sample of 13 v
6) - BUT higher baseline values more likely to die in
larger studies - Higher cortisolDHEAs ratio predicted death
- BUT are we simply dealing with severity of
illness markers?
24Assessing HPA function in critical illness
25Problems of assessing HPA function in acute
illness
- Total versus free cortisol
- Transcortin low capacity, high affinity
- Transcortin may fall in acute illness
- Thus total but not necessarily free cortisol may
fall - Can use calculated correction factor, serum
cortisol divided by the transcortin
concentrations - BUT
26Problems of assessing HPA function in acute
illness
- Total versus free cortisol
- Transcortin low capacity, high affinity
- Albumin high capacity, low affinity
- At higher concentrations more will be albumin
bound (when transcortin is saturated) - Thus when albumin falls in the stressed
individual, the effect on total cortisol is
disproportionate
27(No Transcript)
28Is this a significant effect?
- 66 critically ill patients
- 7-10 fold increase in free cortisol conc
- AND
- 40 of the hypoproteinaemic patients failed SST
if total cortisol was used as the marker c/w free
cortisol - NEJM 3501629-38
29Should we use the SST?
30GR, 78 yrs old
- Collapse post-hip replacement, severe headache
- BP 80/50
- Na115
- Diagnosed SIADH
- Fluid-restricted
31GR, 78 yrs old
- Further collapse
- Endo SpR reviewed
- Random cortisol 125
- SST rise to 490
- Given steroids
- Developed 3rd nerve palsy
32GR, 78 yrs old
33Clinical conclusion
- SST is not valid in acute onset of secondary
hypoadrenalism
34Returning to more common critical illness
- Several studies have advocated RISE or increment
in cortisol as key factor - Then used as justification for steroid use
- Returning to complication of CBG/albumin levels,
one proposal - Interpret in context of albumin
- If albumin gt 25 g/l, peak lt20 mcg/dl (550)
deficiency
35The Coolens method
- U2 x K (1 N) U1 N K(G T) T 0,
- where T is cortisol, G is CBG, U is unbound
cortisol, - K is the affinity of CBG for cortisol at 37 C
- N albumin bound free cortisol ratio
- The value of N would be expected to change with
altered concentrations of plasma albumin - Countered by investigating the distribution of
cortisol (600 nmol/l) in varying concentrations
of purified human serum albumin solutions using
equilibrium dialysis. - Use experimentally derived values of N to further
calculate free cortisol, thus compensating for
variations in plasma albumin. - J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2006 Jan91(1)105-14
- J Steroid Biochem. 1987 Feb26(2)197-202
36Medication a complicating factor
- Potential effects on binding but also synthesis
- Etomidate is a imidazole used as an anaesthetic
to facilitate intubation - Causes reversible inhibition of 11 ß-hydroxylase
- Associated with impaired HPA axis function even
after single injection - This has confounded some of the larger studies
- Either should be abandoned or given with steroid
cover
37Relative adrenal insufficiency
- Patients without risk factors for adrenal
dysfunction - critical illness related corticosteroid
insufficiency (CIRCI). ( inappropriate steroid
activity given a patient's severity of illness) - Serum cortisol levels FELT to be inadequate
- 299 patients with septic shock
- Non-responderslt250 increment
- Non-responders benefited from corticosteroid
- 68 of the non-responders had etomidate
- ? No published response re benefit for
non-etomidate, non-responders - JAMA 288862-871
38Glucocorticoid therapy during acute illness
- CORTICUS study
- (Corticosteroid Therapy of Septic Shock)
- Multicentre, international, double-blind RCT.
- primary end point was 28-day all-cause mortality
in "nonresponders" (defined as a change of 9
mcg/dL in cortisol after a 250-mcg SST - Secondary end points mortality, organ failure
resolution, and safety.
39CORTICUS study
- Powered on 800 patients to detect a 10
difference in mortality. - 500 participants
- 50 mg of hydrocortisone every 6 hours for 5 days
with a tapering dose over the next 6 days v
placebo
40CORTICUS study results
- no differences in these baseline characteristics
/ severity of illness - For no outcome end point was there a difference
with use of corticosteroids. - All-cause mortality was similar (34
corticosteroids vs 31 placebo). - Mortality rates also did not vary based on
responder status. - nonresponders tended to have higher mortality
overall. - Rates of superinfection were higher in those
given corticosteroids (34 vs 27, P .099). - The frequency of hospital-acquired new sepsis was
also higher in those randomized to steroids. - Hyperglycemia was also more common on study day 1
in persons treated with corticosteroids. - (report of American Chest meeting)
41Corticus a word of caution
- Clinical trials register
- Study Type InterventionalStudy
Design Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind,
Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment,
Safety/Efficacy Study - BUT
- Adrenal function in sepsis the retrospective
Corticus cohort study - Crit Care Med. 2007 Apr35(4)1012-8.
- Annane is listed as last author and also on
trials database
42A last resort?
- The decision to administer steroids in in sepsis
cannot be based on markers of adrenal function,
rather treatment should be considered in septic
patients with vasopressor refractory hypotension - Ann Pharmacother 2007411456-65
43Conclusions
- Management of hypoadrenalism in critically ill
patients with identified aetiology is
straightforward - There remains a clear role for considering the
individual patient and using clinical acumen
44Conclusions
- Total cortisol levels may be misleading in
critical illness - Due to alterations in CBG and albumin levels
- This can be corrected for either by testing free
cortisol OR the Coolens method
45Conclusions
- Drugs previously commonly used in anaesthesia
impair cortisol synthesis and genuinely
compromise adrenal function - Other drugs can affect CBG levels and total
cortisol measurements
46Conclusions
- The evidence for blanket use of moderate high
dose steroids in critical illness has NOT been
made - Some use pragmatic approach i.e. if all else
fails
47Finally..
- Thus use clinical acumen and consider the
aetiology - Interpret function in the light of altered
physiology - Be aware of limitations of interventional studies