Calculate the starting Vetoryl (Trilostane) dose for your dog's Cushing's disease treatment.
Enter your dog's weight to calculate the recommended dose.
Calculated Dose
Give once daily with food. Adjust only after ACTH stimulation testing.
Enter your dog's weight above
⚕️ Vetoryl is a prescription-only medicine. Incorrect dosing of Trilostane can cause life-threatening adrenal insufficiency. This calculator is a starting reference only — all dosing must be directed and monitored by your veterinarian.
Vetoryl (Trilostane) is a prescription medication used to treat pituitary-dependent and adrenal-dependent hyperadrenocorticism (Cushing's disease) in dogs. It works by inhibiting the production of cortisol by the adrenal glands.
The recommended starting dose of Trilostane is 2–5 mg/kg once daily with food. A conservative starting dose of 2.2–2.7 mg/kg is commonly used. Your vet will adjust based on ACTH stimulation testing after 10 days and at 4 and 12 weeks.
Vetoryl capsules come in 10 mg, 30 mg, 60 mg, and 120 mg. Because the capsules cannot be split, the dose is rounded to the nearest available capsule size. Often a combination of capsule sizes is used.
An ACTH stimulation test must be performed 4–6 hours post-pill at 10 days, 4 weeks, 12 weeks, and then every 3 months. Target post-ACTH cortisol is 40–150 nmol/L. Never adjust the dose without vet guidance. Signs of Addisonian crisis (over-suppression) — lethargy, vomiting, collapse — require immediate emergency treatment.
Precise trilostane (Vetoryl) starting and adjusted dosing for dogs with hyperadrenocorticism (Cushing’s disease) — covering PDH, adrenal-dependent and iatrogenic forms, capsule selection, and ACTH stimulation test monitoring targets.
Never use without confirmed Cushing’s diagnosis and regular ACTH stimulation test monitoring. Trilostane inhibits adrenal steroidogenesis and can cause life-threatening hypoadrenocorticism (Addison’s crisis) if the dose is too high. Mandatory ACTH stimulation test at 10–14 days, 4 weeks, 12 weeks, then every 3 months. Emergency glucocorticoid supplementation protocol must be established before starting.
3β-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Inhibitor — Adrenal Cortisol Synthesis Blocker
Trilostane reversibly inhibits the enzyme 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD) in the adrenal cortex, blocking the conversion of pregnenolone to progesterone, which is a key early step in cortisol, aldosterone, and sex steroid biosynthesis. This selectively reduces cortisol hypersecretion in Cushing’s disease.
Pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism (PDH — the most common form, ~85% of cases), and adrenal-dependent HAC (ADH) in dogs not suitable for surgery. It is the only FDA-approved medical treatment for canine Cushing’s disease.
| Indication | Dose | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Starting dose (PDH) | 2–5 mg/kg | q24h PO with food |
| Starting dose (ADH) | 2–10 mg/kg | q24h PO with food |
| Dose adjustment | Target post-ACTH cortisol | 50–150 nmol/L (1.4–5.5 mcg/dL) |
ACTH stimulation test (post-ACTH cortisol target 50–150 nmol/L) at Days 10–14, 1 month, 3 months, then every 3 months. Electrolytes (Na, K) at each recheck. Physical signs, water intake, and urination frequency tracking.
Vetoryl (trilostane) is the FDA- and EMA-approved treatment for both pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism (PDH) and adrenal-dependent hyperadrenocorticism (ADH) in dogs. It competitively inhibits 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD), a key enzyme in the adrenal steroidogenesis cascade, reducing synthesis of cortisol, aldosterone, and other steroids from cholesterol precursors in the adrenal cortex. Unlike mitotane (o,p’-DDD), trilostane is a reversible inhibitor — stopping the drug allows adrenal function to recover.
Trilostane is available as 10 mg, 30 mg, 60 mg, and 120 mg hard capsules (Vetoryl). The drug must be given with food to ensure consistent absorption — fat-containing meals significantly improve bioavailability. Capsules must not be opened or crushed (risk of topical exposure).
| Post-ACTH Cortisol | Interpretation | Clinical Signs | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| <40 nmol/L (<1.5 mcg/dL) | Adrenal insufficiency | Lethargy, vomiting, collapse | STOP trilostane; supportive glucocorticoids; emergency vet |
| 40–200 nmol/L (1.5–7.5 mcg/dL) | Target range ✓ | Clinical signs controlled | Maintain current dose; recheck in 3 months |
| 200–300 nmol/L (7.5–10.9 mcg/dL) | Partial control | Some signs remain | Increase dose ~25%; recheck ACTH in 4 weeks |
| >300 nmol/L (>10.9 mcg/dL) | Inadequate control | PU/PD, pot belly persist | Increase dose 25–50% or switch to q12h; recheck in 4 weeks |
ACTH stimulation test timing: perform 4–6 hours AFTER the morning trilostane dose (not before), using 5 mcg/kg synthetic ACTH (tetracosactide) IV. This captures the nadir of cortisol suppression to detect over-suppression, and the plateau to assess overall control.
| Dog Weight | Starting Dose (2.5 mg/kg) | Suggested Capsule(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 5 kg | 12.5 mg | 10 mg × 1 (monitor closely) |
| 8 kg | 20 mg | 10 mg × 2 |
| 12 kg | 30 mg | 30 mg × 1 |
| 16 kg | 40 mg | 30 mg + 10 mg |
| 24 kg | 60 mg | 60 mg × 1 |
| 32 kg | 80 mg | 60 mg + 10 mg × 2 |
| 40 kg | 100 mg | 60 mg + 30 mg + 10 mg |
| 48 kg | 120 mg | 120 mg × 1 |
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