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      Late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency is an allelic variant of congenital adrenal hyperplasia characterized by attenuated clinical expression and different HLA haplotype associations.

      Hormone research
      Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital, genetics, immunology, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, diagnostic use, Adult, Female, HLA Antigens, analysis, Humans, Hydroxyprogesterones, blood, Male, Pedigree, Steroid Hydroxylases, deficiency

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          Abstract

          Three families with late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency were studied. Homozygous females presented with symptoms of mild hyperandrogenism such as acne, hirsutism, oligomenorrhea and menometrorrhagia. A homozygous male was asymptomatic and had reached normal adult height. The diagnosis of 21-hydroxylase deficiency was based upon markedly elevated responses of plasma 17-hydroxyprogesterone during a short (30-min) ACTH infusion test. The propositi of two of the families were diagnosed despite long-standing glucocorticoid therapy and adrenal suppression by using a prolonged (48-hour) ACTH infusion. Heterozygotes of late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency had mildly elevated 17-hydroxy-progesterone responses to ACTH. Late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency was inherited as an autosomal recessive trait with close linkage to the histocompatibility leukocyte antigens. The B14 haplotype was present in all affected members. One affected female had a daughter with classic, salt-losing 21-hydroxylase deficiency. Mixed heterozygosity of this patient for a classic and a late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency allele may have caused the classic phenotype in her daughter (homozygote for 2 classic alleles).

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