Medical treatment of Cushing's syndrome: Adrenal-blocking drugs and ketaconazole

80Citations
Citations of this article
84Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Cushing's syndrome is associated with serious morbidity and increased mortality. Irrespective of its cause, i.e. a pituitary adenoma, ectopic ACTH production or an adrenal neoplasia, Cushing's syndrome is primarily treated surgically. However, when surgery is unsuccessful or contraindicated, medical therapy is needed to treat hypercortisolism. The spectrum of available drugs includes adrenal-blocking agents, neuromodulatory drugs and glucocorticoid receptor antagonists. Adrenal blocking drugs suppress adrenal cortisol production via inhibition of steroidogenic enzymes. Ketoconazole and metyrapone are most frequently used for this purpose, but chronic treatment with these drugs can be limited by side effects like hepatotoxicity (ketoconazole) and increased androgen and mineralocorticoid production (metyrapone). Etomidate can be used to rapidly reverse cortisol excess in patients with acute complications of (severe) hypercortisolism like psychosis. In Cushing's disease, combination therapy with drugs that target the corticotropic adenoma, i.e. the universal somatostatin analogue pasireotide and/or the dopamine agonist cabergoline, and low-dose ketoconazole seems a rational approach to achieve biochemical control. © 2010 S Karger AG, Basel.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Feelders, R. A., Hofland, L. J., & De Herder, W. W. (2010). Medical treatment of Cushing’s syndrome: Adrenal-blocking drugs and ketaconazole. In Neuroendocrinology (Vol. 92, pp. 111–115). https://doi.org/10.1159/000314292

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free