Somatization symptoms are frequently associated with feelings of distress, and these features interact with the activity of cortisol. Clinical studies indicate that hypocortisolism is a biological marker of stress-related disorders (Heim et al., 2000; Ehlert et al., 2001). We have described an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) receptor promoter polymorphism (-2 CTC→CCC) within the transcription initiation site that leads to a lower ACTH sensitivity in normal individuals (Slawik et al., 2004), which is associated with a lower cortisol secretion (Reisch et al., 2005) and therefore may influence cortisol homeostasis under stress conditions. The aim of this cross-sectional study was therefore to investigate the prevalence of the -2 CTC→CCC ACTH receptor promoter polymorphism systematically in a group of patients with SFD (somatoform disorders). Blood samples of 42 patients (33 women, nine men with an age range of 18-63 years; median 40.5) who met International Classification of Diseases-10 diagnostic criteria for SFD were analyzed for the ACTH receptor promoter polymorphism as previously described (Slawik et al., 2004) and compared with male healthy control individuals (n=1.266 with an age range of 18-50). All patients (recruited from the Psychosomatic Outpatient Clinic) and healthy controls (recruited from blood donors) were German with a European genetic background. In SFD, 35 patients revealed the wild-type genotype (83%), six were heterozygous (14%) and one homozygous (2%) for the -2 CTC→CCC ACTH receptor promoter polymorphism. The prevalence of the polymorphism in 1266 unrelated healthy men was 80.2% for CTC/CTC, 19.0% for CTC/CCC, and 0.8% for CCC/CCC (genotypes were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium). The prevalence of the -2 CTC→CCC ACTH receptor promoter polymorphism in SFD did not differ from the normal healthy population (P=0.298). Additionally, we found only moderate depression severity scores (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale 14.0, SD=6.44; Beck Depression Inventory 18.6, SD=10.71) and no significant relationship between the carrier status of the -2 CTC→CCC ACTH receptor promoter polymorphism (wild type or heterozygous/homozygous) and the depression scores [Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (P=0.950, d.f.=40) and Beck Depression Inventory (P=0.934, d.f.=40)]. The hypocortisolism of stress-related disorders such as SFD described in recent studies (e.g. Heim et al., 2000) obviously can not be explained by a decreased adrenal responsiveness to ACTH resulting in lower cortisol secretion owing to the -2 CTC→CCC polymorphism within the transcription initiation site of the ACTH receptor gene. In summary, our results do not support an involvement of the -2 CTC→CCC ACTH receptor promoter polymorphism in SFD; further studies would be valuable to replicate our results. © 2008 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.