I did some more digging. You are right, that it's actually ACTH effect on Cortisol. I decided to post what I wrote up, in case anyone wants to take a look.
ACTH levels increase rapidly for the first couple months. No cortisol is being produced up until about the 5th month. During this period, barely any cortisol is being produced, despite rising levels of ACTH. The adrenocortical is basically absolutely “insensitive” to ACTH. Massive negative feedback from the exogenous hormones has probably down-regulated the number of ACTH receptors. Thus, the levels of ACTH were not enough to stimulate production of cortisol (high threshold). Therefore its sensitivity to ACTH is very, very low, post-steroidal therapy.
As the adrenocortical begins to recover from the massive negative feedback effect, and as ACTH production ramps up and beyond “normal” levels, the adrenocortical begins to produce cortisol. Sensitivity is still very low, but the seesaw effect between low sensitivity and high stimulus (levels of ACTH), is able to produce some cortisol. Therefore, we can say, the adrenocortical is still very low, but attainable. The high levels of ACTH, combined with the low levels of cortisol produced suggest the responsiveness of the adrenocortical is also very low.
As the amount of ACTH increases, and as the adrenocortical further recovers, both the sensitivity and responsiveness increases. The rising slope of the cortisol line gives a primitive interpretation /indication of the rising responsiveness. At the end of the 10th month, ACTH production begins to decrease, but cortisol levels stay the same. We can assume that the adrenocortical has fully recovered from negative feedback, and has reached its “normal” state. The subsequent plateau of the cortisol line suggests that the “normal” responsiveness of the adrenocortical has been achieved. The responsiveness of the adrenocortical to ACTH after month 10 has not changed and thus this measurement can be considered its maximal responsiveness. The decrease in ACTH at the end is very important. It shows us that the sensitivity of cortisol has drastically changed. The same level of ACTH that produced a very,very low amount of of cortisol (shown at month 5), now produces a “normal” amount of cortisol shown at month 12, suggesting sensitivity has increased. Less ACTH is required to produce a response.
In summary, as the cortisol levels begin to increase, the sensitivity of the adrenocortical begins to increase. This is the minimum amount of ACTH to cause the adrenocortical to produce cortisol. Since the adrenocortical is recovering from negative feedback, its states are changing, and sensitivity is also changing/increasing. Responsiveness is best shown when the cortisol level plateaus. Despite rising ACTH levels, the cortisol is “capped” and this is the maximal responsiveness of the adrenocortical.