When should hydrocortisone therapy be instituted in children with hypopituitarism?
L. Witz, Z. Josefsberg, H. Kaufman and Z. Laron
Institute of Pediatric and Adolescent Endocrinology, Beilinson Medical Center, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv (Israel) University.
The records of 72 pediatric and adolescent patients with multiple
hypothalamic and/or pituitary hormone deficiencies of nontumoral origin who
were followed up for years and receiving somatotropin, thyroxine, and sex
hormones at the appropriate age have been reviewed. According to their
corticotropin-releasing factor-corticotropin-cortisol (CAC) axis function
as evaluated by basal plasma cortisol levels and the response of cortisol
to insulin hypoglycemia and to corticotropin-releasing factor, the patients
were divided into three groups: group 1 (n = 25), patients with multiple
hypothalamic and/or pituitary hormone deficiencies with normal CAC axis;
group 2 (n = 38), patients with partial CAC deficiency without cortisol
replacement therapy (hydrocortisone); and group 3 (n = 9), patients with
CAC deficiency receiving hydrocortisone therapy (5 to 10 mg/d). Repeated
CAC axis evaluation in patients of group 2 over years revealed a
progressive decrease in the basal and stimulated cortisol levels with age
and pubertal advancement. Despite the low cortisol levels and the low
cortisol response to insulin hypoglycemia, these patients did not have
clinical symptoms until the end of puberty when nine of 24 patients
complained of abdominal pain, weakness, or anorexia. Linear growth, which
was followed up in all patients at regular intervals, showed a lower growth
velocity and irregular growth in response to somatotropin treatment in the
patients receiving low doses of hydrocortisone (group 3 patients when
compared with group 2 patients not receiving hydrocortisone).