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Temporal and individual variations in the dose of glucocorticoid used for the treatment of salt‐losing congenital virilizing adrenal hyperplasia due to 21‐hydroxylase deficiency

15

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30

References

1993

Year

Abstract

The dose of glucocorticoid was evaluated in the treatment of 19 patients with salt-losing congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to complete or nearly complete 21-hydroxylase deficiency. In most cases, follow-up was from infancy to puberty. The dose of steroid was expressed as oral cortisol (mg/m2 body surface area/24 hours); the equivalent doses of the various glucocorticoid preparations was as follows: 100 mg oral cortisol = 120 mg oral cortisone acetate = 25 mg oral prednisone = 50 mg intramuscular cortisol = 60 mg intramuscular cortisone acetate. The dose of glucocorticoid producing good laboratory and clinical control varied significantly with age. The dose fell from 26 mg/m2/24 hours in early infancy to 19 mg/m2/24 hours between 6 and 8 years of age, and then rose to 23-24 mg/m2/hour in adolescence. In addition to these age-related changes, there were large individual variations at each age. Indeed, the values from 4 of the 19 patients were not included in the calculation of the mean because they were more than 3 SD either above or below the mean. For the rest of the patients, the coefficient of variation ranged from 14.5% to 37.2%. It is concluded that glucocorticoid therapy must be adjusted carefully to the age and needs of each patient.

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