Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Using pre- and 3-hour post-trilostane cortisol to monitor dogs
By Macfarlane, L et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2016·North Downs Specialist Referral, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Pre-trilostane and three-hour post-trilostane cortisol to monitor trilostane therapy in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with Cushing's disease (hyperadrenocorticism) were treated with a medication called trilostane, and their cortisol levels were measured before and three hours after taking the medication. The results showed that these cortisol measurements were better at indicating how well the dogs were responding to treatment compared to a standard test. None of the dogs showed signs of low adrenal function, which can be a side effect of treatment. This suggests that measuring cortisol levels before and after trilostane could be a more effective way to monitor treatment success in dogs with Cushing's disease.
People also search for: dog Cushing's disease treatment · trilostane monitoring in dogs · cortisol levels in dogs with Cushing's
Abstract
It is recommended that trilostane therapy of canine hyperadrenocorticism is monitored using an ACTH stimulation test, however this has never been validated. Three cortisol concentrations (pre-trilostane, 3-hour posttrilostane and 1-hour post-ACTH stimulation) were compared to a clinical score obtained from an owner questionnaire. There were 110 sets of 3 cortisol measurements and questionnaires obtained from 67 trilostane treated dogs. Questionnaire results were used to classify each dog as well or unwell. Well dogs were then categorised as having excellent, moderate or poor hyperadrenocorticism control, using thresholds produced by 14 independent veterinarians. Correlation co-efficients were used to compare the three cortisol concentrations to the owner score and the Kruskal Wallis and Mann-Whitney U tests were used to compare the three cortisol concentrations between categories of control. Cortisol cut-off values between significantly different categories were determined using ROC curves. Pre-trilostane and 3-hour post-trilostane cortisol were better correlated to the owner score and had cut-offs to differentiate between categories of control that had superior sensitivity and specificity results, than the post-ACTH cortisol. Iatrogenic hypoadrenocorticism was not detected in any unwell dog. This study shows that the pre-trilostane and 3-hour post-trilostane cortisol are potentially better monitoring methods than the ACTH stimulation test.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27803375/