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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Comparing two prepill cortisol tests in dogs treated for high cortisol

By Boretti, Felicitas et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2018·Clinic for Small Animal Internal Medicine·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of two prepill cortisol concentrations in dogs with hypercortisolism treated with trilostane.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 16 dogs with Cushing's disease (hypercortisolism) were monitored while being treated with a medication called trilostane. Researchers measured their cortisol levels before taking the medication on two separate occasions, one hour apart. They found that the cortisol levels varied significantly between the two measurements in many dogs, which could lead to different treatment decisions. Factors like stress during blood collection may have influenced these results. This suggests that pet owners should inform their vets about any stressful events that might affect their dog's cortisol levels when monitoring treatment.

People also search for: dog Cushing's disease treatment · trilostane monitoring in dogs · cortisol levels in dogs with Cushing's

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The ideal method for monitoring trilostane therapy in dogs with hypercortisolism is still open to debate. Recently, determination of the pre-trilostane (prepill) cortisol concentration has been proposed to be more repeatable than either post-trilostane or post-ACTH cortisol. The aim of this study was to compare two prepill cortisol concentrations in dogs with hypercortisolism during trilostane therapy. Sixteen client-owned dogs with naturally occurring hypercortisolism were prospectively included and cortisol concentrations were measured twice, 1 h apart, before the morning trilostane dose (prepill 1 and 2 cortisol). RESULTS: A total of 47 prepill cortisol measurement pairs were included. Compared to prepill 1, prepill 2 cortisol was higher in 15, equal in 8 and lower in 24 pairs. Group agreement between prepill 1 and 2 cortisol was 70% (moderate agreement - weighted kappa 0.55). In 30% of the pairs, group assignment was discrepant, implying a different therapeutic decision. In some dogs certain circumstances (e.g. excessive barking, difficulties during blood collection, excitement at arrival) were identified as potential factors explaining the discrepancy between prepill 1 and 2 cortisol measurements. CONCLUSIONS: In a substantial number of dogs treated with trilostane, the two prepill cortisol concentrations differed. Part of this difference might be ascribable to stressful events during test performance. When using prepill cortisol measurements to monitor trilostane therapy, recording of any incident during handling that might affect cortisol release might be helpful to make a reliable decision about a trilostane dose adaptation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30591042/