II. Definitions

  1. Cushings Syndrome
    1. Chronic Glucocorticoid excess
  2. Cushing Disease
    1. ACTH Secreting pituitary tumors
    2. Named for Harvey Cushing, who first described the condition in 1932
  3. Hypercortisolism
    1. Glucocorticoid excess
    2. May represent up to 2 to 5% of poorly controlled type diabetes cases with Hypertension
    3. Functional hypercortisolism also occurs in pregnancy

III. Epidemiology

  1. Incidence: 1-3 cases per million/year
  2. Prevalence: 40 cases per million
  3. Gender: More common in women (3:1)
  4. Peak age
    1. Women: 50 to 60 years old

IV. Causes

  1. ACTH Dependent Cushings Syndrome (80%)
    1. Central Cause
      1. Pituitary Adenoma
    2. Adrenal Cause
      1. Adrenal Adenoma
      2. Bilateral Adrenal Hyperplasia
      3. Adrenal Malignancy (15%)
    3. Ectopic Source
      1. Malignancy (Small Cell Carcinoma of the lung: 15%)
  2. ACTH Independent Cushings Syndrome (20%)
    1. Iatrogenic
      1. Corticosteroid therapy (most common cause)
  3. Pseudo-Cushings Syndrome
    1. Obesity
    2. Major Depression
    3. Alcoholism

V. Precautions

  1. Delayed diagnosis is common (often 3 to 6 years after initial symptoms)

VI. Symptoms

  1. Mood changes (depression, anxiety, irritability)
  2. Easy Bruising
  3. Weakness
  4. Weight gain
  5. Amenorrhea
  6. Back pain

VII. Signs

  1. General
    1. Truncal Obesity (90%)
    2. Glucose Intolerance (80%)
    3. Moon facies
    4. Plethoric face
  2. Protein wasting
    1. Thin skin
    2. Wide, purple abdominal and thigh striae (65%)
    3. Easy Bruising and slow healing
    4. Muscle wasting (esp. leg atrophy)
  3. Musculoskeletal
    1. Osteoporosis (55%)
    2. Supraclavicular fat pad development
    3. Buffalo hump (Thoracic kyphosis)
    4. Myopathy
  4. Cardiovascular
    1. Hypertension (85% when Cushing Disease is caused by tumors, 20% when iatrogenic)
    2. Peripheral Edema
  5. Hyperandrogenism
    1. Hirsutism (70%)
    2. Hypertrichosis
    3. Irregular Menses (e.g. Amenorrhea)

VIII. Diagnosis

  1. Screening Test
    1. 24-hour Urinary free cortisol level (preferred, performed at least twice)
      1. Urine 17-Ketosteroid excretion
      2. Urine 17-Hydroxysteroid excretion
    2. Serum Cortisol
    3. Low dose Dexamethasone Suppression Test
      1. Dexamethasone 1 mg at 11pm
      2. Plasma Cortisol in following 8 AM
    4. Night-time Salivary Cortisol testing
  2. Distinguish between pituitary, adrenal or ectopic cause
    1. Plasma ACTH
    2. High dose Dexamethasone Suppression Test (8 mg)

IX. Differential Diagnosis

  1. See Causes above

X. Imaging

  1. CT or MRI Cone down Sella Turcica
    1. Pituitary Adenoma
  2. CT Abdomen
    1. Adrenal Adenoma

XI. Management

  1. Exogenous Cushing Syndrome (Iatrogenic Cushing Syndrome, most common cause)
    1. Stop Corticosteroids or decrease dose
    2. Change steroid dosing to every other day with drug holiday
  2. Endogenous Cushing Syndrome
    1. Transphenoidal surgery to excise adenoma (in pituitary or adrenal)
      1. Preferred first-line management
      2. Associated with 65 to 90% remission rate for microadenomas (65% for macroadenomas)
    2. Alternatives to Surgical Management (and adjunctive in refractory cases)
      1. Pituitary Radiation Therapy
        1. Risk of Hypopituitarism
      2. Bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing Disease
        1. Requires subsequent lifelong adrenal replacement therapy
      3. Medications
        1. Central Inhibition of ACTH Secretion (e.g. pasireotide, Cabergoline)
        2. Adrenal Steroidogenesis Inhibition (e.g. Ketoconazole, metyrapone, Mitotane, osilodrostat)
        3. Glucocorticoid Receptor Blockade (e.g. Mifepristone)

XIII. Prognosis

  1. Untreated cases are ultimately fatal
  2. Overall mortality rate 10%

XIV. Resources

  1. Cushings Disease (StatPearls)
    1. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK448184/

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