CONTEXT: Pegvisomant is an effective treatment for somatostatin analogue-resistant acromegaly, but the determinants defining the response to this treatment are largely unknown. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the efficacy of pegvisomant treatment in resistant acromegalic patients (e.g. serum IGF1 at least 1.25 x upper normal limit) in a clinical setting and the factors conditioning this response. DESIGN AND SETTING: A retrospective cross-sectional study performed in six Spanish University hospitals from 2004 to 2007. Patients Forty-four acromegalic patients (61.4% female, mean age: 49+/-14), 95% of whom had undergone pituitary surgery and 61% having received pituitary radiotherapy. The mean follow-up was 22.7+/-11.2 months. Main outcome measures IGF1 levels reflected treatment efficacy, and the influence of gender, age, weight, previous radiotherapy and duration of treatment was assessed. RESULTS: IGF1 normalisation was achieved in 84% of the patients. Male gender (P<0.05), previous irradiation (P<0.05) and the treatment duration (r=0.364, P<0.02) were associated with a better response to pegvisomant therapy. There was a significant decrease in HbA1c (P<0.001) and in the mean insulin dose (P<0.01) in acromegalic diabetic patients. Although 25% of patients experienced mild adverse events, pegvisomant was only withdrawn in four patients due to side effects (two cases of tumour growth, one liver dysfunction and one headache). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term pegvisomant is a very effective therapy in resistant acromegaly. Male gender and prior radiotherapy influence the therapeutic response rate.
CONTEXT: Pegvisomant is an effective treatment for somatostatin analogue-resistant acromegaly, but the determinants defining the response to this treatment are largely unknown. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the efficacy of pegvisomant treatment in resistant acromegalicpatients (e.g. serum IGF1 at least 1.25 x upper normal limit) in a clinical setting and the factors conditioning this response. DESIGN AND SETTING: A retrospective cross-sectional study performed in six Spanish University hospitals from 2004 to 2007. Patients Forty-four acromegalicpatients (61.4% female, mean age: 49+/-14), 95% of whom had undergone pituitary surgery and 61% having received pituitary radiotherapy. The mean follow-up was 22.7+/-11.2 months. Main outcome measures IGF1 levels reflected treatment efficacy, and the influence of gender, age, weight, previous radiotherapy and duration of treatment was assessed. RESULTS:IGF1 normalisation was achieved in 84% of the patients. Male gender (P<0.05), previous irradiation (P<0.05) and the treatment duration (r=0.364, P<0.02) were associated with a better response to pegvisomant therapy. There was a significant decrease in HbA1c (P<0.001) and in the mean insulin dose (P<0.01) in acromegalic diabeticpatients. Although 25% of patients experienced mild adverse events, pegvisomant was only withdrawn in four patients due to side effects (two cases of tumour growth, one liver dysfunction and one headache). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term pegvisomant is a very effective therapy in resistant acromegaly. Male gender and prior radiotherapy influence the therapeutic response rate.
Authors: M Ragonese; S Grottoli; P Maffei; A Alibrandi; M R Ambrosio; G Arnaldi; A Bianchi; S Puglisi; M C Zatelli; L De Marinis; E Ghigo; A Giustina; F Maffezzoni; C Martini; L Trementino; S Cannavo Journal: J Endocrinol Invest Date: 2017-10-28 Impact factor: 4.256
Authors: I Bernabeu; C Alvarez-Escolá; A E Paniagua; T Lucas; I Pavón; J M Cabezas-Agrícola; F F Casanueva; M Marazuela Journal: Pituitary Date: 2013-03 Impact factor: 4.107
Authors: S Cannavo; F Bogazzi; A Colao; L De Marinis; P Maffei; R Gomez; E Graziano; M Monterubbianesi; S Grottoli Journal: J Endocrinol Invest Date: 2015-04-28 Impact factor: 4.256
Authors: I Bernabeu; A Pico; E Venegas; J Aller; C Alvarez-Escolá; J A García-Arnés; M Marazuela; P Jonsson; N Mir; M García Vargas Journal: Pituitary Date: 2016-04 Impact factor: 4.107