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Adrenocorticosteroids & Adrenocortical antagonists Introduction • The adrenal cortex synthesizes three classes of steroids: the glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids and the androgens • Glucocorticoids, those having important effects on intermediary metabolism and immune function, mineralocorticoids, those having principally salt-retaining activity and those steroids having androgenic or estrogenic activity Introduction • In humans, cortisol (hydrocortisone) is the glucocorticoid and aldosterone is the mineralocorticoid main main • Quantitatively, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is the major adrenal androgen (20 mg) secreted daily • Adrenal androgens constitute the major endogenous precursors of estrogen in women after menopause and in younger patients in whom ovarian function is deficient or absent Introduction • The adrenal gland synthesizes steroids from cholesterol, which is derived from plasma lipoproteins • Some of the reactions in the biosynthetic pathway can be inhibited by drug • Ex: Metyrapone prevents the β-hydroxylation at C11, and thus the formation of hydrocortisone and corticosterone From: Adrenocorticosteroids & Adrenocortical Antagonists Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 13e, 2015 Legend: Outline of major pathways in adrenocortical hormone biosynthesis. The major secretory products are underlined. Pregnenolone is the major precursor of corticosterone and aldosterone, and 17-hydroxypregnenolone is the major precursor of cortisol. The enzymes and cofactors for the reactions progressing down each column are shown on the left and across columns at the top of the figure. When a particular enzyme is deficient, hormone production is blocked at the points indicated by the shaded bars. (Reproduced, with permission, from Ganong WF: Review of Medical Physiology, 22nd ed. McGraw-Hill, 2005. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.) 2/15/2015 Date of download: Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Introduction • Both natural and synthetic corticosteroids are used for the diagnosis and treatment of a variety of inflammatory and immunological disorders • Secretion of the adrenocortical steroids is controlled by the pituitary release of corticotropin (ACTH) • Secretion of the salt retaining hormone aldosterone is primarily under the influence of angiotensin • Inhibitors of the synthesis or antagonists of the action of adrenocortical steroids are important in the treatment of several conditions The role of the HPA in the regulation of glucorticoid hormone synthesis and release Stress + + Hypothalamus + CRH - Anterior pituitary gland - ACTH + Adrenal cortex Cortisol Circardian & pulsatile rhythms Regulation of adrenocortical hormone Secretion • Three characteristic modes of regulation of the HPA axis: a) Diurnal rhythm in basal steroidogenesis b) Marked increases in steroidogenesis in response to stress (e.g injury, hemorrhage, severe infection, major surgery, hypoglycemia, cold, pain, and fear) c) Negative feedback regulation by adrenal corticosteroids Glucocorticoids • Principal human glucocorticoid is cortisol • In the normal adult, in the absence of stress, 10–20 mg of cortisol is secreted daily • It exerts a wide range of physiologic effects, including regulation of intermediary metabolism, CV function, growth, and immunity • Rate of secretion follows circadian rhythm governed by irregular pulses of ACTH that peak in the early morning hours and after meals From: Adrenocorticosteroids & Adrenocortical Antagonists Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 13e, 2015 Legend: Circadian variation in plasma cortisol throughout the 24-hour day (upper panel). The sensitivity of tissues to glucocorticoids is also circadian but inverse to that of cortisol, with low sensitivity in the late morning and high sensitivity in the evening and early night (lower panel). The sensitivity of tissues to glucocorticoids is inversely related to that of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) acetylation by the transcription factor CLOCK; the acetylated receptor has decreased transcriptional activity. (Adapted, with permission, from Nader N, Chrousos GP, Kino T: Interactions of the circadian CLOCK system and the HPA axis. Trends Endocrinol Metab 2010;21:277. Copyright Elsevier.) Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Date of download: 2/15/2015 Pharmacokinetic • In plasma, 90% of cortisol is bound to CBG • ~5–10% is free or loosely bound to albumin (large capacity but low affinity) • CBG is increased in pregnancy and with estrogen administration and in hyperthyroidism • Synthetic corticosteroids (dexamethasone) largely bound to albumin rather than CBG • T1/2 of cortisol in the circulation ~60–90 minutes • Only 1% of free cortisol is excreted unchanged in the urine; most is metabolized in the liver Synthetic glucocorticoids • Alterations in the glucocorticoid molecule influence its protein-binding affinity, side chain stability, rate of elimination, and metabolic products • Chemical modifications to the cortisol molecule have generated derivatives with greater separations of glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid activity • The relative anti-inflammatory potency of each of the synthetic analogues is compared with cortisol and is roughly correlated with its biological half-life Synthetic glucocorticoids • All of the other undesirable side effects of supraphysiological concentrations of hydrocortisone have been observed with the synthetic analogues • Available in a wide range of preparations: orally, IV, IM, intra-articularly, topically, or as an aerosol for inhalation Activity1 Equivalent Oral Salt-Retaining Dose (mg) Forms Available 1 20 Oral, injectable, topical 0.8 0.3 0.3 25 5 5 Oral Oral Oral, injectable 0.25 4 Oral, injectable 0 4 Oral, injectable 7 0 0 0 4 2 1.5 Oral, injectable, topical Oral, injectable Oral 10 10 0 0 0.6 0.75 Oral, injectable, topical Oral, injectable, topical 2 Oral Agent AntiTopical Inflammatory Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Hydrocortisone 1 1 (cortisol) Cortisone 0.8 0 Prednisone 4 0 Prednisolone 5 4 5 Methylprednisolone Meprednisone2 5 Intermediate-acting glucocorticoids Triamcinolone 5 Paramethasone2 10 Fluprednisolone2 15 Long-acting glucocorticoids Betamethasone 25–40 Dexamethasone 30 Mineralocorticoids Fludrocortisone 10 5 0 250 Desoxycorticosteron 0 e acetate2 0 20 53 Injectable, pellets Metabolic effects • GCs have important dose-related effects on CHO, protein, and fat metabolism • Glucocorticoids stimulate and are required for gluconeogenesis and glycogen synthesis in the fasting state • Stimulate the release of amino acids in the course of muscle catabolism • Glucocorticoids increase serum glucose levels and inhibit the uptake of glucose by muscle cells resulting in increased blood glucose levels Metabolic effects • They stimulate hormone sensitive lipase and thus lipolysis • The increased insulin secretion stimulates stimulates lipogenesis and to a lesser degree inhibits lipolysis • Net effect is to increase in fat deposition combined with increased release of FA and glycerol into the circulation • These results are most apparent in the fasting state where maintains adequate glucose supply to the brain Anti-inflammatory & Immunosuppressive Effects • Glucocorticoids dramatically reduce the manifestations of inflammation • They inhibit both the early and the late manifestations of inflammation • They reverse virtually all types of inflammatory reaction, whether caused by invading pathogens, by chemical or physical stimuli, or by inappropriate deployed immune responses (hypersensitivity or autoimmune disease) Catabolic and Antianabolic Effects • Glucocorticoids have catabolic and antianabolic effects in lymphoid and connective tissue, muscle, peripheral fat, and skin • Supraphysiologic amounts of glucocorticoids lead to decreased muscle mass and weakness and thinning of the skin • Catabolic and antianabolic effects on bone are the cause of osteoporosis in Cushing's syndrome • In children, glucocorticoids reduce growth Other physiologic effect • CNS effects: Indirect and direct effects on mood, behaviour, and brain excitability (adrenal insufficiency is associated with depression). Large doses of glucocorticoids may increase intracranial pressure (pseudotumor cerebri). • GIT: Large doses of glucocorticoids have been associated with the development of peptic ulcer • GC tend to produce a negative calcium balance: decrease Ca2+ absorption in the GIT and increase its excretion by the kidney • Chronically suppress the pituitary release of ACTH, GH, TSH, and LH Other physiologic effect • Development of the fetal lungs: stimulates the production of surfactant required for air breathing during development of fetal lungs Clinical Pharmacology 1. Replacement therapy in adrenocortical insufficiency • Adrenal insufficiency can result from: a) Structural or functional lesions of the adrenal cortex (primary adrenal insufficiency or Addison's disease) b) Structural or functional lesions of the anterior pituitary or hypothalamus OR exogenous corticosteroid use (secondary adrenal insufficiency) Clinical Pharmacology a. Chronic adrenocortical insufficiency (Addison's disease): • Characterized by weakness, fatigue, weight loss, hypotension, hyperpigmentation, and inability to maintain blood glucose during fasting • About 20–30 mg of hydrocortisone must be given daily, with increased amounts during periods of stress • Synthetic glucocorticoids that are long-acting and devoid of salt-retaining activity should not be administered to these patients Clinical Pharmacology a. Chronic adrenocortical insufficiency (Addison's disease): • Although hydrocortisone has some mineralocorticoid activity, this must be supplemented by an appropriate amount of a salt-retaining hormone such as fludrocortisone • In an effort to mimic the normal diurnal rhythm of cortisol secretion, glucocorticoids are generally in two divided doses; two-thirds in the morning and one-third in the afternoon Clinical Pharmacology b. Acute adrenocortical insufficiency (adrenal crisis) • Life-threatening disease characterized by GI symptoms (nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain), dehydration, hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, weakness, lethargy, and hypotension • The most common cause is abrupt withdrawal of exogenous glucocorticoids in patients receiving chronic treatment • When acute adrenocortical insufficiency is suspected, treatment must be instituted immediately with parenteral hydrocortisone Clinical Pharmacology 2. Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH) • In 90% of patients results from mutations in CYP21 (21βhydroxylase) leading to virilization • The goals of therapy are to normalize the patient hormone level by suppressing the release of CRH and ACTH (decrease production of adrenal androgens) • Patients require replacement therapy with hydrocortisone, and those with salt wasting also require mineralocorticoid replacement (fludrocortisone acetate) P450scc Clinical Pharmacology 3. Acceleration of Lung Maturation • Reduces the incidence of respiratory distress syndrome in premature infants • When delivery is anticipated before 34 weeks of gestation, intramuscular betamethasone, 12 mg, followed by an additional dose of 12 mg 18–24 hours later Clinical Pharmacology 5. Non-endocrine Diseases • The synthetic analogues of cortisol are useful in the treatment of a diverse group of diseases unrelated to any known disturbance of adrenal function • The usefulness of corticosteroids in these disorders is a function of their ability to suppress inflammatory and immune responses and to alter leukocyte function Therapeutic Indications for the Use of Glucocorticoids in Nonadrenal Disorders Disorder Allergic reactions Examples Angioneurotic edema, asthma, bee stings, contact dermatitis, drug reactions, allergic rhinitis, serum sickness, urticaria Collagen-vascular disorders Giant cell arteritis, lupus erythematosus, mixed connective tissue syndromes, polymyositis, polymyalgia rheumatica, rheumatoid arthritis, temporal arteritis Eye diseases Acute uveitis, allergic conjunctivitis, choroiditis, optic neuritis Gastrointestinal diseases Inflammatory bowel disease, nontropical sprue, subacute hepatic necrosis Hematologic disorders Acquired hemolytic anemia, acute allergic purpura, leukemia, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, multiple myeloma Systemic inflammation Acute respiratory distress syndrome (sustained therapy with moderate dosage accelerates recovery and decreases mortality) Infections Acute respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis Inflammatory conditions of Arthritis, bursitis, tenosynovitis bones and joints Neurologic disorders Cerebral edema (large doses of dexamethasone are given to patients following brain surgery to minimize cerebral edema in the postoperative period), multiple sclerosis Organ transplants Prevention and treatment of rejection (immunosuppression) Pulmonary diseases Aspiration pneumonia, bronchial asthma, prevention of infant respiratory distress syndrome, sarcoidosis Nephrotic syndrome Renal disorders Skin diseases Thyroid diseases Miscellaneous Atopic dermatitis, dermatoses, lichen simplex chronicus (localized neurodermatitis), mycosis fungoides, pemphigus, seborrheic dermatitis, xerosis Malignant exophthalmos, subacute thyroiditis Hypercalcemia, mountain sickness Dosage • In determining the dosage of adrenocortical steroids many factors need to be considered: 1) 2) 3) 4) Glucocorticoid: mineralocorticoid activity Duration of therapy Seriousness of the disease Amount of drug likely to be required to obtain the desired effect 5) Type of preparation 6) Time of day when the steroid is administered Route of administration of glucocorticoids Route of administration Agent Oral All can be administered orally IM Cortisone, desoxycorticosterone, triamicnolone IV, IM Aerosol Intra-nasal Topical Dexamethasone, hydrocortisone, methylprednisolone, prednisolone Beclomethasone, flunisolide, triamcinolone Beclomethasone dipropionate, triamcinolone acetonide, budesonide, flunisolide Beclomethasone, dexamethasone, hydrocortisone, triamcinolone ADEs • Two categories of toxic effects result from the therapeutic use of corticosteroids: a) Those resulting from continued use at supraphysiological doses b) Those resulting from withdrawal of steroid therapy ADE • Iatrogenic Cushing’s syndrome • Rounding, puffiness, fat deposition, and plethora (moon facies) • Fat redistribution from the extremities to the trunk, the back of the neck, and the supraclavicular fossae • Increase growth of fine hair over thigh, trunk & face • Acne • Insomnia & increase appetite • Wound healing impairement • Myopathy and muscle wasting • Thinning of the skin, with striae and bruising • Hyperglycemia; and eventually diabetes • Osteoprosis • Aseptic necrosis of the hip ADEs • Immune Responses: glucocorticoid use is associated with an increased susceptibility to infection and a risk for reactivation of latent TB • Fluid and Electrolyte Handling: hypokalemic alkalosis and hypertension .Use synthetic non-salt-retaining steroids, Na+ restriction, & potassium supplements • CNS: – Hypomania or acute psychosis may occur, particularly in patients receiving very large doses of corticosteroids – Long-term therapy with intermediate- and long-acting steroids is associated with depression and the development ADEs • • Ocular: Increased intraocular pressure is common, and glaucoma may be induced. Growth retardation: particularly medium-, intermediate-, and long-acting glucocorticoids ADEs • Withdrawal of Therapy • Characterized by flare-up of the underlying disease for which steroids were prescribed and acute adrenal insufficiency, results from overly rapid withdrawal of corticosteroids after prolonged therapy has suppressed the HPA axis • A characteristic glucocorticoid withdrawal syndrome consists of fever, myalgia, arthralgia, malaise, and N, V, which may be difficult to differentiate from some of the underlying diseases for which steroid therapy was instituted Contraindications & Cautions • CONTRAINDICATIONS: • • • • Peptic ulcer Hypertension Infections Psychoses • • • • Diabetes Heart failure Osteoporosis Glaucoma • CAUTIONS: • Monitor for developing hyperglycemia, hypokalemia, hypernatremia • In case of withdrawal supply with adequate fluids and maintain electrolyte balance Mineralocorticoids • The most important mineralocorticoid in humans is aldosterone • Fludrocortisone, a synthetic corticosteroid, is the most common prescribed salt-retaining hormone • The quantities of aldosterone produced by the adrenal cortex and its plasma concentrations are insufficient to participate in any significant feedback control of ACTH secretion • ACTH produces a moderate stimulation of its release Renin-Angiotensin System renal blood flow &/or Na+ ++ Juxtaglomerular apparatus of kidneys Renin Angiotensinogen Angiotensin I ACE Angiotensin III Angiotensin II (powerful vasoconstrictor) (powerful vasoconstrictor) Adrenal cortex Aldosterone Corticosterone Physiologic & Pharmacologic Effects • Aldosterone and other steroids with mineralocorticoid properties promote the reabsorption of Na+ from the distal part of the distal convoluted tubule and from the cortical collecting renal tubules, loosely coupled to the excretion of K+ and H+ • Excessive levels of aldosterone (tumors or overdosage with synthetic mineralocorticoids) lead to hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, increased plasma volume, and hypertension Mineralocorticoid Deficiency • Leads to hypotension and vascular collapse, Na+ wasting and contraction of the extracellular fluid volume, hyperkalemia, and acidosis • Oral fludrocortisone is used adrenocortical insufficiency mineralocorticoid deficiency in the treatment of associated with • Has both mineralo- & glucocorticoid and activity but the doses used are to small to exert anti-inflammatory and antigrowth effects Antagonists of Adrenocortical agents Synthesis Inhibitors a) Aminoglutethimide • Blocks the conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone and causes a reduction in the synthesis of all hormonally active steroids • Aminoglutethimide can be used in conjunction with metyrapone or ketoconazole to reduce steroid secretion in patients with Cushing’s syndrome due to adrenocortical cancer who do not respond to mitotane 1. Synthesis Inhibitors b) Metyrapone • Interferes with corticosteroid synthesis by blocking the final step (11-hydroxylation) in glucocorticoid synthesis, leading to an increase in 11-deoxycortisol and the potent mineralocorticoid 11-deoxycorticosterone • It can be used in diagnostic tests of adrenal function and can be used to treat pregnant women with Cushing’s syndrome • ADEs: water retention, hirsutism, transient dizziness, & GIT disturbances 1. Synthesis Inhibitors e) Abiraterone • It blocks 17α-hydroxylase (P450c17) and 17,20-lyase, and predictably reduces synthesis of cortisol in the adrenal and gonadal steroids in the gonads • A compensatory increase occurs in ACTH and aldosterone synthesis, but this can be prevented by concomitant administration of dexamethasone • Abiraterone is approved for the treatment of refractory prostate cancer 2. Recptor antagonists a) Mifepristone (RU 486) • At high doses, it is a potent glucocorticoid antagonist as well as an antiprogestin • Its use can only be recommended for inoperable patients with ectopic ACTH secretion or adrenal carcinoma who have failed to respond to other options tone 2. Recptor antagonists b) Spironolactone • Competes aldosterone for the MR and thus inhibits sodium reabsorption in the kidney • It also compete with DHT for the androgen receptor and inhibits 17α-hydroxylase activity • It is effective against hyperaldosteronism. It is also useful in the treatment of hirsutism in women, probably due to interference at the androgen receptor of the hair follicle • ADEs: hyperkalemia, gynecomastia, menstrual irregularities, and skin rask 2. Recptor antagonists c) Eplerenone is a aldosterone antagonist approved for the treatment of HTN. It specifically avoids the gynecomastia associated with spironolactone d) Drospirenone is a progestin in an oral contraceptive (Yasmin®), also antagonizes the effects of aldosterone