ELEVATED URINARY EXCRETION OF 18-OXOCORTISOL IN GLUCOCORTICOID-SUPPRESSIBLE ALDOSTERONISM

Abstract
A radioimmunoassay procedure for the measurement of urinary 18-oxocortisol was developed. The antibody was raised against 18-oxocortisol 3-carboxymethyloxime-BSA and had relatively high specificity, except for aldosterone (26.3%). The RIA required a preliminary HPLC purification using a Lichrosorb diol column eluted with toluene:acetonitrile:isopropanol:acetic acid (83:11.9:5.1:0.01). The eluate portion corresponding to 18-oxocortisol was evaporated and subjected to RIA. The RIA procedure had an intraassay variability of 11% when using a pool containing 10.8 μg/24 hr (n=6) and 17% with a pool containing 3.28 μg/24 hr. The interassay variability was 11% (n=4). The recovery of added 18-oxocortisol was 90 ± 10%. The urinary excretion of 18-oxocortisol in 22 white normal subjects was 3.26 ± 1.98 (SD) μg/24 hr (range 0.8 to 7.1 μg/24 hr). The mean excretion of 18-oxocortisol in 4 patients with glucocorticoid-suppressible aldosteronism (GSA) was 38.6 μg/24 hr (range 25.5 to 54.6 μg/24 hr). The excretion of 18-oxocortisol in 3 patients with adenomas producing primary aldosteronism (APA) varied between 11.1 to 17.3 μg/24 hr and in 3 patients with idiopathic aldosteronism (IA) varied between 2.5 to 10.6 μg/24 hr. 18-0xocortisol excretion is increased markedly in the urine of patients with GSA: what role this relatively weak mineralocorticoid plays in the pathogenesis of their hypertension is unknown. Its elevation is probably a reflection of a postulated lack of involution of the 18-methyloxidase in the inner layers of the adrenal.