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SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Introduction: Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) is associated with anterior pituitary hormone dysfunction. The potential long-term effect of this injury on pituitary function in Veterans is not clear. We reviewed the utility of the fixed dose Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) compared with the high d...

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Autores principales: Nagireddi, Rama Priyanka, Win, Htet Htet, Wagstaff, Sarah, Neal, Moira, Friedman, Kathryn, Anderson, Robert J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208304/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.604
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author Nagireddi, Rama Priyanka
Win, Htet Htet
Wagstaff, Sarah
Neal, Moira
Friedman, Kathryn
Anderson, Robert J
author_facet Nagireddi, Rama Priyanka
Win, Htet Htet
Wagstaff, Sarah
Neal, Moira
Friedman, Kathryn
Anderson, Robert J
author_sort Nagireddi, Rama Priyanka
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) is associated with anterior pituitary hormone dysfunction. The potential long-term effect of this injury on pituitary function in Veterans is not clear. We reviewed the utility of the fixed dose Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) compared with the high dose Cosyntropin Stimulation test (CST) for hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) reserve over time in these patients with mTBI. Methods: We present an interim report of our 4-year longitudinal prospective pilot study of pituitary function in Veterans diagnosed with mTBI. Of the 34 mTBI Veterans enrolled, we have tested 28 of them (4 female, 24 male; age and BMI, 31.5±7.0 years and 30.4±6.2, mean±SD, respectively) for baseline pituitary hormone levels and cortisol response to the CST. In 22 subjects growth hormone and cortisol responses to GST were tested at baseline (Year 0). Follow-up testing was done for 18 mTBI subjects in Year 1, 13 subjects in Year 2, 10 subjects in Year 3 and 5 subjects in Year 4. The same baseline data were obtained for 14 age-, sex-, deployment- and BMI-matched control subjects without mTBI (2 female,12 male; age and BMI 34.4±6.8 years and 30.5±4.9, mean±SD, respectively). Cortisol cutoffs of <18 mcg/dL with the CST and <9.0 mcg/dL with the GST were used for the diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency. Results: Secondary adrenal insufficiency (AI), likely partial, was identified during this study on 6 occasions: 3/22 subjects at Year 0, 1/18 at Year 1, 0/13 at Year 2, 1/10 at Year 3 and 1/5 at Year 4. Two baseline subjects with AI reverted to normal in Years 1-3, one relapsed in Year 4 and a third had no further testing. Correlations of the cortisol levels from GST vs the 60-minute cortisol from CST were significant at Year 0 (n=22, r=0.553, p=0.008) and at Year 1 (n=18, r=0.802, p<0.0001). Due to decreased numbers, there were no significant correlations at Years 2 through 4. Similar correlations were obtained using the 30-minute CST values. However, the CST cortisol value predicted the low GST value in only 2/6 subjects. The mean GST cortisol levels and 60-minute CST cortisol levels for subjects at each year were not significantly different over Years 0 through 4 based on ANOVA analyses (CST: F=1.519, p= 0.206; GST: F= 0.796, p=0.532). Conclusions: Secondary adrenal insufficiency, likely partial, related to mTBI was detected by GST on 6 occasions (twice in one patient) over 4 years of observation. GST can provide useful information about HPA axis reserve, and appears to be more reliable than CST. Identification of potential secondary adrenal insufficiency using the GST in Veterans with mTBI can provide a beneficial combined test for these patients when other testing is not feasible.
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spelling pubmed-72083042020-05-13 SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Nagireddi, Rama Priyanka Win, Htet Htet Wagstaff, Sarah Neal, Moira Friedman, Kathryn Anderson, Robert J J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Introduction: Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) is associated with anterior pituitary hormone dysfunction. The potential long-term effect of this injury on pituitary function in Veterans is not clear. We reviewed the utility of the fixed dose Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) compared with the high dose Cosyntropin Stimulation test (CST) for hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) reserve over time in these patients with mTBI. Methods: We present an interim report of our 4-year longitudinal prospective pilot study of pituitary function in Veterans diagnosed with mTBI. Of the 34 mTBI Veterans enrolled, we have tested 28 of them (4 female, 24 male; age and BMI, 31.5±7.0 years and 30.4±6.2, mean±SD, respectively) for baseline pituitary hormone levels and cortisol response to the CST. In 22 subjects growth hormone and cortisol responses to GST were tested at baseline (Year 0). Follow-up testing was done for 18 mTBI subjects in Year 1, 13 subjects in Year 2, 10 subjects in Year 3 and 5 subjects in Year 4. The same baseline data were obtained for 14 age-, sex-, deployment- and BMI-matched control subjects without mTBI (2 female,12 male; age and BMI 34.4±6.8 years and 30.5±4.9, mean±SD, respectively). Cortisol cutoffs of <18 mcg/dL with the CST and <9.0 mcg/dL with the GST were used for the diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency. Results: Secondary adrenal insufficiency (AI), likely partial, was identified during this study on 6 occasions: 3/22 subjects at Year 0, 1/18 at Year 1, 0/13 at Year 2, 1/10 at Year 3 and 1/5 at Year 4. Two baseline subjects with AI reverted to normal in Years 1-3, one relapsed in Year 4 and a third had no further testing. Correlations of the cortisol levels from GST vs the 60-minute cortisol from CST were significant at Year 0 (n=22, r=0.553, p=0.008) and at Year 1 (n=18, r=0.802, p<0.0001). Due to decreased numbers, there were no significant correlations at Years 2 through 4. Similar correlations were obtained using the 30-minute CST values. However, the CST cortisol value predicted the low GST value in only 2/6 subjects. The mean GST cortisol levels and 60-minute CST cortisol levels for subjects at each year were not significantly different over Years 0 through 4 based on ANOVA analyses (CST: F=1.519, p= 0.206; GST: F= 0.796, p=0.532). Conclusions: Secondary adrenal insufficiency, likely partial, related to mTBI was detected by GST on 6 occasions (twice in one patient) over 4 years of observation. GST can provide useful information about HPA axis reserve, and appears to be more reliable than CST. Identification of potential secondary adrenal insufficiency using the GST in Veterans with mTBI can provide a beneficial combined test for these patients when other testing is not feasible. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7208304/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.604 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
Nagireddi, Rama Priyanka
Win, Htet Htet
Wagstaff, Sarah
Neal, Moira
Friedman, Kathryn
Anderson, Robert J
SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
title SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
title_full SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
title_fullStr SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
title_full_unstemmed SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
title_short SUN-311 Adrenal Reserve Testing with the Glucagon Stimulation Test (GST) and Cosyntropin Stimulation Test (CST) in Deployed Veterans with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
title_sort sun-311 adrenal reserve testing with the glucagon stimulation test (gst) and cosyntropin stimulation test (cst) in deployed veterans with mild traumatic brain injury
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208304/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.604
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