Use of ketoconazole in the treatment of a virilizing adrenocortical carcinoma.

Acta Endocrinol (Copenh)

Department of Endocrinology, Middleheim Hospital, Antwerp, Belgium.

Published: August 1989

Ketoconazole, an oral antimycotic agent, is known to have a potent inhibitory effect on adrenal steroid production. It was given at a dose of 1200 mg/day to a 52-year-old female patient with a virilizing adrenocortical carcinoma in order to achieve better metabolic control pre-operatively. Together with a rapid normalisation of hypertension and hyperglycemia, a dramatic fall was noticed in serum and urinary adrenal steroids after a few days. Levels of total testosterone (20 nmol/l), androstenedione (greater than 35 nmol/l) and DHEA-sulphate (greater than 28 nmol/l) fell to normal levels in 6 days. By contrast, levels of 17-OH-progesterone (30 nmol/l) and progesterone (2.45 nmol/l) increased slightly, indicating inhibition of adrenal 17,20-lyase. Cortisol (620 nmol/l at 08.00 h) fell to very low levels (50 nmol/l) on day 6 of the trial. We conclude that ketoconazole is very effective in suppression of adrenal tumoural steroidogenesis and merits consideration in pre-operative use. We warn against dangerous hypoadrenalism which seems to occur earlier in tumoural than in normal adrenal metabolism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/acta.0.1210229DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

virilizing adrenocortical
8
adrenocortical carcinoma
8
greater nmol/l
8
nmol/l
7
adrenal
5
ketoconazole treatment
4
treatment virilizing
4
carcinoma ketoconazole
4
ketoconazole oral
4
oral antimycotic
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!