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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07558135
NA

The ARISE Trial Compares Whether Giving Routine Steroid Replacement or Using Targeted Blood Tests to Guide Replacement Better Protects Certain Patients From Adrenal Insufficiency After the Removal of a Diseased Adrenal Gland.

Sponsor: King's College Hospital NHS Trust

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Adrenalectomy is an operation to remove one of the adrenal glands. It is commonly performed to treat adrenal tumours or conditions that cause excess hormone production. The adrenal glands produce important hormones, including cortisol and aldosterone, which help regulate blood pressure, metabolism and the body's response to stress. After adrenalectomy, some patients may develop adrenal insufficiency, a condition in which the body does not produce enough of these essential hormones. In severe cases, this can lead to an Addisonian (adrenal) crisis, a life-threatening emergency that can cause shock, organ failure and death if not treated promptly. The risk of adrenal insufficiency after surgery depends largely on cortisol levels before the operation. In patients with Cushing's syndrome, where there is excessive cortisol production, the risk of adrenal insufficiency after adrenalectomy is almost 100%. For this reason, these patients routinely receive steroid replacement treatment after surgery to replace missing hormones and prevent adrenal crisis. For other patients undergoing adrenalectomy, the best management approach is less clear. Patients with mild autonomous cortisol secretion (MACS) have a moderate risk of adrenal insufficiency - around 50-65%. Patients with normal cortisol secretion (NCS) may also develop adrenal insufficiency because one adrenal gland has been removed, occurring in around 20-37% of cases. International medical guidelines currently disagree on how best to manage these patients after surgery. Some recommend measuring cortisol levels the morning after surgery and treating only if levels are low, while others recommend giving steroid treatment to all patients with mild cortisol excess. There is currently no clear guidance for patients with normal cortisol secretion. This study will compare these management strategies to determine which approach best reduces the risk of adrenal insufficiency after adrenalectomy. The study will be conducted at King's College Hospital and will run for approximately two years.

Official title: Adrenalectomy Recovery and Sustained Insufficiency After Steroid Exposure (ARISE): A Randomised Controlled Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

96

Start Date

2026-09

Completion Date

2028-12

Last Updated

2026-04-30

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

Empirical Hydrocortisone Protocol

Routine administration of Hydrocortisone (e.g., 50mg-100mg IV followed by oral tapering doses) starting immediately post-adrenalectomy even in presence of normal \>300nmol/L cortisol reading on post-operative day 1.

DRUG

Targeted Treatment Protocol

Administration of Hydrocortisone is withheld and the patient is monitored if Post-Operative Day 1 (POD1) serum cortisol level is \>300nmol/L and patient is asymptomatic.