Effect of Flutamide on Cortisol Metabolism*

Abstract
The effect of flutamide on cortisol metabolism was studied in eight patients with prostate cancer. Flutamide markedly decreased the formation of 3α,17,21-trihydroxypregnane-ll,20-dione (THE), 3α,- llβ,17,21-tetrahydroxypregnan-20-one (THF), and the ll-oxy-17-ketosteroid metabolites by 72%, 50%, and 46% respectively; however, 3α,llβ,17,21-tetrahydroxy-5apregnan- 20-one was increased by 46%. The 24-h mean plasma cortisol concentration was not altered. The cortisol production rate decreased by an average of 53% (from 32.7 to 15.5 mg/24 h). The effect of the drug on plasma cortisol kinetics was studied in three patients. This showed that flutamide increased the tfrac12 (from 80 to 108 min) but decreased the distribution volume (from 17.8 to 13.8 liters) and the MCR (from 222 to 130 liters/24 h). The changes in THE and THF formation and in the tfrac12 and MCR of [14C]cortisol are similar to the effects observed in patients with intrahepatic cholestasis. It is suggested that in the case of flutamide these changes were also due to a cholestasis-producing effect of the drug on the liver. As the clinical response to the drug did not correlate with the cortisol metabolic changes, its therapeutic effect was probably not mediated by its effects on cortisol metabolism.