Literature DB >> 19465485

High-dose intramuscular octreotide in patients with acromegaly inadequately controlled on conventional somatostatin analogue therapy: a randomised controlled trial.

Andrea Giustina1, Stefania Bonadonna, Giovanna Bugari, Annamaria Colao, Renato Cozzi, Salvatore Cannavo, Laura de Marinis, Ettore Degli Uberti, Fausto Bogazzi, Gherardo Mazziotti, Francesco Minuto, Marcella Montini, Ezio Ghigo.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In acromegaly, 25-50% of patients respond inadequately to conventional long-acting somatostatin analogue (SSA) therapy. Response may be improved by increasing SSA frequency or dose. This study evaluated the biochemical efficacy and safety of high-dose octreotide in patients with acromegaly.
DESIGN: A 24-week prospective, multicentre, randomised, open-label trial conducted from 12 December 2005 to 23 October 2007 in patients with persistently uncontrolled acromegaly despite > or =6 month conventional SSA therapy.
METHODS: Patients with > or =50% reduction in GH levels during previous SSA treatment were randomised to high-dose (60 mg/28 days) or high-frequency (30 mg/21 days) octreotide i.m. injection. Primary end-points were week 12 and 24 reduction in serum IGF1 and GH from baseline. Secondary end points included IGF1 normalisation and tumour shrinkage rates, and safety/tolerability evaluations.
RESULTS: Significantly, more patients (10 out of 11) achieved week 24 IGF1 reduction in the high-dose than the high-frequency group (8 out of 15; P<0.05). In the high-dose group only, week-24 IGF1 values were significantly reduced (P=0.02) versus baseline. Normalisation of IGF1 occurred only with the high-dose regimen (4/11; P=0.02). Out of 14 patients experiencing adverse events, 5 reported drug-related gastrointestinal effects. No dose-response relationship was seen. Safety parameters were similar between treatment groups, apart from a slight decrease in HbA1c in the high-dose group only.
CONCLUSION: High-dose octreotide treatment is safe and effective (normalisation of IGF1 levels) in a subset of patients with active acromegaly inadequately controlled with long-term SSA. Individualised octreotide doses up to 60 mg/28 days may improve outcomes of SSA therapy.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19465485     DOI: 10.1530/EJE-09-0372

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Endocrinol        ISSN: 0804-4643            Impact factor:   6.664


  32 in total

1.  Dose optimization of somatostatin analogues for acromegaly patients.

Authors:  A Colao; G Lombardi
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 4.256

2.  The treatment of neuroendocrine tumors with long-acting somatostatin analogs: a single center experience with lanreotide autogel.

Authors:  A Bianchi; L De Marinis; A Fusco; F Lugli; L Tartaglione; D Milardi; M Mormando; A P Lassandro; R Paragliola; C A Rota; S Della Casa; S M Corsello; M G Brizi; A Pontecorvi
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2011-11-07       Impact factor: 4.256

3.  Shortened interval of long-acting octreotide administration is effective in patients with well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas in progression on standard doses.

Authors:  P Ferolla; A Faggiano; F Grimaldi; D Ferone; G Scarpelli; V Ramundo; R Severino; M C Bellucci; L M Camera; G Lombardi; G Angeletti; A Colao
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2011-07-13       Impact factor: 4.256

Review 4.  Expert consensus document: A consensus on the medical treatment of acromegaly.

Authors:  Andrea Giustina; Philippe Chanson; David Kleinberg; Marcello D Bronstein; David R Clemmons; Anne Klibanski; Aart J van der Lely; Christian J Strasburger; Steven W Lamberts; Ken K Y Ho; Felipe F Casanueva; Shlomo Melmed
Journal:  Nat Rev Endocrinol       Date:  2014-02-25       Impact factor: 43.330

5.  Optimal use of pegvisomant in acromegaly: are we getting there?

Authors:  Andrea Giustina
Journal:  Endocrine       Date:  2014-10-28       Impact factor: 3.633

Review 6.  Somatostatin receptor ligands in the treatment of acromegaly.

Authors:  Monica R Gadelha; Luiz Eduardo Wildemberg; Marcello D Bronstein; Federico Gatto; Diego Ferone
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 4.107

7.  Effect of rosiglitazone on serum IGF-I concentrations in uncontrolled acromegalic patients under conventional medical therapy: results from a pilot phase 2 study.

Authors:  F Bogazzi; G Rossi; M Lombardi; F Raggi; C Urbani; C Sardella; C Cosci; E Martino
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2010-07-29       Impact factor: 4.256

Review 8.  Escalated-dose somatostatin analogues for antiproliferative effect in GEPNETS: a systematic review.

Authors:  David L Chan; Diego Ferone; Manuela Albertelli; Nick Pavlakis; Eva Segelov; Simron Singh
Journal:  Endocrine       Date:  2017-07-19       Impact factor: 3.633

Review 9.  The role of combination medical therapy in the treatment of acromegaly.

Authors:  Dawn Shao Ting Lim; Maria Fleseriu
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 4.107

Review 10.  Multidisciplinary management of acromegaly: A consensus.

Authors:  Andrea Giustina; Garni Barkhoudarian; Albert Beckers; Anat Ben-Shlomo; Nienke Biermasz; Beverly Biller; Cesar Boguszewski; Marek Bolanowski; Jens Bollerslev; Vivien Bonert; Marcello D Bronstein; Michael Buchfelder; Felipe Casanueva; Philippe Chanson; David Clemmons; Maria Fleseriu; Anna Maria Formenti; Pamela Freda; Monica Gadelha; Eliza Geer; Mark Gurnell; Anthony P Heaney; Ken K Y Ho; Adriana G Ioachimescu; Steven Lamberts; Edward Laws; Marco Losa; Pietro Maffei; Adam Mamelak; Moises Mercado; Mark Molitch; Pietro Mortini; Alberto M Pereira; Stephan Petersenn; Kalmon Post; Manuel Puig-Domingo; Roberto Salvatori; Susan L Samson; Ilan Shimon; Christian Strasburger; Brooke Swearingen; Peter Trainer; Mary L Vance; John Wass; Margaret E Wierman; Kevin C J Yuen; Maria Chiara Zatelli; Shlomo Melmed
Journal:  Rev Endocr Metab Disord       Date:  2020-09-10       Impact factor: 6.514

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