Increased free circulating glucocorticoid
Aetiology
- The most common cause of cortisol excess is the therapeutic administration of synthetic steroids (iatrogenic)
- Cushing's disease is when the increased cortisol levels are caused by a functioning pituitary adenoma, all other causes are referred to as Cushing's syndrome
ACTH dependent
- Pituitary adenoma (68%) → Cushing's disease
- Ectopic ACTH (12%) - carcinoid/carcinoma e.g. lung, pancreas
- Ectopic CRH (<1%)
ACTH independent
- (Exogenous steroids)
- Adrenal adenoma (10%) or carcinoma (8%)
- Adrenal cortical nodular hyperplasia (1%)
- False positive (pseudo) - severe depression, severe alcoholism
Pathophysiology
ACTH-independent
- Autonomous over-production of cortisol by the adrenal gland due to neoplasia/nodular hyperplasia
- Adrenal enlargement in ACTH-independent disease is usually nodular
ACTH-dependent
- Adrenal enlargement in ACTH-dependent disease is usually diffuse
Pituitary adenomas (Cushing's disease)
- Pituitary secretes increased ACTH → increased cortisol production by adrenal gland
Ectopic ACTH
- Carcinoma e.g. small cell lung cancer secretes ACTH → increased cortisol production by adrenal gland
Ectopic CRH
- Carcinoma e.g. medullary thyroid carcinoma secretes CRH → increased ACTH by pituitary → increased cortisol by adrenal gland
Consequences of increased cortisol levels
- Protein loss
- Altered carbohydrate and lipid metabolism
- Excess mineralocorticoid
- Excess androgen
Clinical presentation
General
- Plethora (redness of the face)
- Moon face
- Hypertension
- Central obesity
- Depression/psychosis
- Glycosuria/diabetes mellitus
- Oedema
- 'Buffalo hump'
- Virilism
Skin
- Bruising
- Striae (purple or red)
- Pigmentation (only occurs with ACTH-dependent causes)
- Thin skin
- Hirsutism
- Acne
Musculoskeletal
- Proximal myopathy, wasting
- Osteoporosis, fractures
Reproductive
- Oligo/amenorrhoea
Distinguishing between Cushing's and obesity
Cushings is characterised by:
- Thin skin
- Proximal myopathy
- Frontal balding in women
- Conjunctival oedema (chemosis)
- Osteoporosis
Investigations
Establish cortisol excess
- Overnight 1mg dexamethasone suppression test (oral) - first line
- Normal: cortisol <50 nmol/l next morning
- Abnormal: cortisol >130 nmol/l
- 24hr urine free cortisol (24hr urine collection)
- Total <250 is normal
- Cortisol/creatinene ratio of<25 is normal
- Diurnal cortisol variation (midnight/8am)
- Loss of diurnal variation suspicious of Cushings
- Serum/saliva/spot urine collection
Diagnostic
- Low dose dexamethasone suppression test
- 2 day 2mg/day dexamethasone
- Normal: cortisol <50 nmol/l 6 hours after last dose
- Cushing's: cortisol >130 nmol/l
- Repeat to confirm
Differential diagnosis of the cause
- If serum ACTH levels are low, this suggests non-ACTH-dependent disease and adrenal imaging should be planned (CT or MRI)
- If serum ACTH levels are high, this suggests ACTH-dependent disease and pituitary MRI should be planned as well as biochemical tests to distinguish between pituitary and ectopic ACTH (high-dose dexamethasone suppression test or exogenous CRH)

Management
Pituitary
- Hypophysectomy (transsphenoidal route)
- External radiotherapy if recurs
- Last line: bilateral adrenalectomy
Adrenal adenoma
- Adrenalectomy
Ectopic
- Remove source
- OR bilateral adrenalectomy
Drug management
- Metyrapone given when other treatments fail or while waiting for radiotherapy to work
- Side effects e.g. N+V common
- Other options include ketoconazole (hepatotoxic) and pasireotide LAR (somatostatin analogue)