Abstract
We examined serum concentration time-series for ACTH and cortisol in 20 patients with pituitary-dependent ACTH excess (Cushing’s disease) and in 29 age- and gender-matched controls. For each subject, blood samples were obtained at 10-min intervals for 24 h. Joint ACTH-cortisol synchrony was quantified using the recently introduced cross-approximate entropy (cross-ApEn) statistic. In patients, cross-ApEn was greater than in controls (1.686 ± 0.051 vs. 1.077 ± 0.039, P = 3.45 × 10−16), giving a sensitivity of 85%. In control subjects, but not in patients, cross-ApEn was correlated positively with age (r = 0.465, P = 0.011) There was no gender difference in cross-ApEn, nor a relationship between cross-ApEn and the 24-h ACTH and cortisol secretion, in patients or controls. In contrast, the maximal cross- correlation coefficient for the ACTH and cortisol series after detrending the series was 0.394 ± 0.033 in controls and 0.297 ± 0.034 in patients with considerable overlap of the subgroups, giving a sensitivity for this index of only 5%. In addition to previous findings of increased individual irregularity of ACTH and cortisol release in Cushing’s disease, we can now also demonstrate greater joint asynchrony of the circulating concentrations of these hormones. Thus, Cushing’s disease disrupts ensemble network secretory dynamics over individual hormone output. We conclude that, like GH-secreting pituitary and aldosterone-secreting adrenal tumors, ACTH-secreting pituitary tumors exhibit significant loss of orderly hormone release patterns. Moreover, Cushing’s disease is marked further by deterioriation of bihormonal synchrony between ACTH and cortisol release, thus suggesting further erosion of within-axis feedback control.

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