Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2016) 41 GP26 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.41.GP26

1Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; 2Department of Surgery, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; 3Department of Clinical Chemistry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.


Introduction: The steroidogenesis inhibitors ketoconazole and metyrapone are frequently used for treatment of Cushing’s syndrome, but can cause side effects. LCI699 is a known 11β-hydroxylase inhibitor, but effects on other steroidogenic enzymes are unknown. We aimed to compare effects of LCI699, ketoconazole, and metyrapone in vitro.

Methods: HAC-15 cells, with or without 10 nM ACTH, and three primary human adrenocortical adenoma cultures were incubated with LCI699, ketoconazole, or metyrapone (3 days; 0.01–5 μM). Cortisol was measured in the supernatant using a chemiluminescence immunoassay system (Immulite 2000Xi), corrected for cell amount. Steroid profiling was carried out in HAC-15 control and 5 μM treated cells by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS).

Results: LCI699 inhibited cortisol production at significantly lower concentrations (EC50: 0.038 μM; 95% CI 0.031–0.048) than ketoconazole (0.764 μM; 0.535–1.092, P<0.0001), and metyrapone (0.084 μM; 0.0602–0.117, P<0.0001). Under ACTH stimulation (mean cortisol increase 37.4±1.98%, P<0.0001), sensitivity only changed for LCI699 (0.056 μM; 0.046–0.070, P<0.05 vs basal EC50). Treatment did not affect cell number. For three primary cultures, the cortisol EC50 of LCI699 (mean 0.050 μM) was significantly lower compared to that of ketoconazole (mean 0.984 μM; P<0.05). LCI699 strongly suppressed corticosterone and cortisol (91%, 87%, resp.; both P<0.001), and modestly suppressed androstenedione (38%), DHEA (38%), DHEAS (33%), testosterone (21%), and 17-hydroxyprogesterone (9.0%) production by HAC-15 cells (P<0.05). Progesterone increased by 70% under LCI699 treatment, while 11-deoxycortisol remained unchanged. The same trend was seen for metyrapone. Ketoconazole strongly inhibited concentrations of all steroids (mean 90%, P<0.001), except progesterone, which increased (644%, P<0.001).

Conclusion: LCI699 is a potent inhibitor of basal- and ACTH-stimulated cortisol production in adrenocortical tumor cells, and in these conditions seems to block 11β-hydroxylase (CYP11B1), and to a lesser extent 17,20-lyase activity. Besides, the absence of strong accumulation of steroid precursors might indicate an inhibition proximal of 3β-HSD.

Article tools

My recent searches

No recent searches.

My recently viewed abstracts