4.7 Article

Performance of DHEAS as a Screening Test for Autonomous Cortisol Secretion in Adrenal Incidentalomas: A Prospective Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 107, Issue 5, Pages E1789-E1796

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgac072

Keywords

autonomous cortisol secretion; dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate; adrenal incidentalomas; diagnosis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81970689]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20181116]
  3. Project of Jiangsu Provincial Medical Youth Talent

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Autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS) affects up to 30% of patients with adrenal incidentalomas (AIs), with lower dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) level being a potential biomarker for diagnosis of ACS. The study found that a single basal measurement of DHEAS is valuable for identifying ACS and could be used as an ACS screening test due to its stability and ease of use.
Context Autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS) affects up to 30% of patients with adrenal incidentalomas (AIs). The current guidelines for ACS diagnosis are not decisive. A lower dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) level is a potential biomarker, but the evidence is conflicting. Objective This prospective study aimed to evaluate and validate the ACS screening and diagnostic accuracy of DHEAS. Methods and patients Recruited patients with AI were screened for adrenal medullary and cortisol hypersecretion. The diagnosis of ACS was based on a serum cortisol level >= 50 nmol/L following a 1-mg dexamethasone suppression test (DST) and a low-dose DST. Age- and sex-specific DHEAS ratios were also calculated. Results In the development cohort (45 ACS and 242 non-ACS patients), the areas under the receiver operator characteristic curves (AUCs) of DHEAS and the DHEAS ratio were 0.869 (95% CI 0.824-0.906) and 0.799 (95% CI 0.748-0.844), respectively. The optimal DHEAS cutoff for diagnosing ACS was 60 mu g/dL, with a sensitivity of 75.6% (95% CI 60.5-87.1) and a specificity of 81.4% (95% CI 76.4-86.5). The midnight serum cortisol level had moderate diagnostic accuracy [AUC 0.875 (95% CI 0.831-0.911)]. Suppressed adrenocorticotropic hormone (<= 2.2 pmol/L) had a lower sensitivity (55.6%), and the 24-hour urinary free cortisol lacked sensitivity and specificity [AUC 0.633 (95% CI 0.603-0.721)]. In the validation cohort (14 ACS and 45 non-ACS patients), the sensitivity and specificity of the optimized DHEAS cutoff were 71.4% (95% CI 41.9-91.6) and 82.2% (95% CI 68.0-92.0), respectively. Conclusions A single basal measurement of DHEAS is valuable for identifying ACS. Because of its stability and ease of use, the DHEAS level could be used as an ACS screening test.

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