| Literature DB >> 26811671 |
Daniel Cuevas-Ramos1, Maria Fleseriu2.
Abstract
Morbidity and mortality rates in patients with active acromegaly are higher than the general population. Adequate biochemical control restores mortality to normal rates. Now, medical therapy has an increasingly important role in the treatment of patients with acromegaly. Somatostatin receptor ligands (SRLs) are considered the standard medical therapy, either after surgery or as a first-line therapy when surgery is deemed ineffective or is contraindicated. Overall, octreotide and lanreotide are first-generation SRLs and are effective in ~20%-70% of patients. Pegvisomant, a growth hormone receptor antagonist, controls insulin-like growth factor 1 in 65%-90% of cases. Consequently, a subset of patients (nonresponders) requires other treatment options. Drug combination therapy offers the potential for more efficacious disease control. However, the development of new medical therapies remains essential. Here, emphasis is placed on new medical therapies to control acromegaly. There is a focus on pasireotide long-acting release (LAR) (Signifor LAR®), which was approved in 2014 by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicine Agency for the treatment of acromegaly. Pasireotide LAR is a long-acting somatostatin multireceptor ligand. In a Phase III clinical trial in patients with acromegaly (naïve to medical therapy or uncontrolled on a maximum dose of first-generation SRLs), 40 and 60 mg of intramuscular pasireotide LAR achieved better biochemical disease control than octreotide LAR, and tumor shrinkage was noted in both pasireotide groups. Pasireotide LAR tolerability was similar to other SRLs, except for a greater frequency and degree of hyperglycemia and diabetes mellitus. Baseline glucose may predict hyperglycemia occurrence after treatment, and careful monitoring of glycemic status and appropriate treatment is required. A precise definition of patients with acromegaly who will derive the greatest therapeutic benefit from pasireotide LAR remains to be established. Lastly, novel therapies and new potential delivery modalities (oral octreotide) are summarized.Entities:
Keywords: emerging treatments; growth hormone; insulin-like growth factor 1; pasireotide; somatostatin analogs; somatostatin receptor ligand
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26811671 PMCID: PMC4714742 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S77999
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Etiology of acromegaly
| Etiology | Disease | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Pituitary | ||
| Adenoma | Acromegaly (type 1, 2, or 3) | Common cause |
| Carcinoma | Malignant acromegaly | Extremely rare |
| Silent | GH-positive adenoma without hypersecretion or acromegaly | |
| Somatotroph hyperplasia | Tumor-secreting ectopic GHRH | |
| Empty sella tumor | GH-secreting tumor remnants arising in rim of pituitary tissue | No clear adenoma in MRI |
| Ectopic | ||
| Excess GH secretion | Aberrant GH-cell adenoma in sphenoid or parapharyngeal sinuses | Ectopic pituitary tissue remnants |
| Ectopic GH-secreting tumor in pancreas or lymphoma | Very rare | |
| Excess GHRH secretion | Hypothalamic hamartoma, choriostomas, gliomas, gangliocytomas | |
| Pancreatic islet cell tumors | ||
| Bronchial and intestinal carcinoids | ||
| Mixed adenomas | ||
| GH plus PRL | Acidophil stem cells tumors | |
| GH plus PRL, ACTH, or rarely TSH | Plurihormonal GH-cell adenomas | |
| Genetic mutations and familial acromegaly | ||
| GH-secreting pituitary adenoma | MEN-1 | Rare |
| Carney complex | Rare | |
| McCune–Albright syndrome | Rare. Associated with pituitary hyperplasia | |
| FIPA | <5% | |
| Isolated familial somatotropinomas | Younger patients | |
| PRKAR1A gene mutations | Rare | |
| AIP mutation | ||
| X-linked acrogigantism | GPR101 mutation | |
| Iatrogenic | GH exogenous administration |
Abbreviations: GH, growth hormone; GHRH, growth hormone-releasing hormone; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PRL, prolactin; ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; MEN-1, multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1; FIPA, familial isolated pituitary adenomas; PRKAR1A, protein kinase cAMP-dependent, regulatory, type 1 α; AIP, aryl hydrocarbon receptor-interacting protein; GPR101, G-protein-coupled receptor 101.
Figure 1Somatostatin and pasireotide structure.
Notes: The two somatostatin isoforms in humans are depicted on the left side. Somatostatin (SST) is a cyclical peptide of 14 (SST-14) or 28 (SST-28) amino acids. Essential functional groups of the SST peptide with high-binding affinity to SSTRs were detected using the alanine scanning technology. Incorporation of four synthetic and two essential amino acids of SST in the form of a novel basic trans-(L)-hydroxyproline aminoethyl-urethane extension, phenylglycine, O-benzyl-tyrosine, and D-Trp to corresponding positions into a stable cyclohexapeptide template resulted in SOM230 or pasireotide, a multireceptor SRL (right side). Adapted from Cuevas-Ramos D, Fleseriu M. Somatostatin receptor ligands and resistance to treatment in pituitary adenomas. J Mol Endocrinol. 2014;52:R223–R240. Copyright © 2014, Society for Endocrinology.92
Abbreviations: SST, somatostatin; SSTR, somatostatin receptor; SRL, somatostatin receptor ligand.
Medical therapy for acromegaly that is commercially available and in different stages of clinical research
| Drug | Mechanism of action | Commercial or research name |
|---|---|---|
| Clinically available | ||
| Octreotide and octreotide LAR | Predominantly SSTR2 SRL | Sandostatin |
| Sandostatin LAR/LAR depot | ||
| Lanreotide, lanreotide SR, and lanreotide autogel | Predominantly SSTR2 SRL | Somatuline autogel |
| Pasireotide LAR | SSTR5 > SSTR2 > SSTR3 > SSTR1 multireceptor SRL | Signifor LAR |
| Pegvisomant | GH-receptor antagonist | Somavert |
| Cabergoline | D2DR agonist | Dostinex |
| Bromocriptine | D2DR agonist | Parlodel |
| Clinical research | ||
| Oral octreotide | Predominantly SSTR2 SRL | Octreolin |
| Long-acting octreotide implants | Predominantly SSTR2 SRL | – |
| Long-acting SC octreotide | Predominantly SSTR2 SRL | CAM2029 |
| Antisense oligonucleotide | Directed to the GH receptor | COR-004 |
| Somatoprim | SSTR2, SSTR4, and SSTR5 multireceptor SRL | COR-005 |
| Botulinum neurotoxin-derived targeted GH secretion inhibitor | GH secretion inhibitor | – |
Abbreviations: LAR, long-acting release; SSTR, somatostatin receptor; SRL, somatostatin receptor ligand; SR, slow release; D2DR, D2 dopamine receptor; SC, subcutaneous; GH, growth hormone.
Figure 2Pasireotide effects.
Notes: The novel multireceptor SRL pasireotide is a stable cyclohexapeptide with high affinity for SSTR5 > SSTR2 > SSTR3 > SSTR1 (blue arrows). The main effect after binding to SSTRs in patients with acromegaly is to decrease GH secretion and induce tumor shrinkage (red arrows).
Abbreviations: SRL, somatostatin receptor ligand; SSTR, somatostatin receptor; GH, growth hormone; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide 1; CYP450, cytochrome P450.
Potential drug interactions with pasireotide LAR
| Mechanism of action | Drug | Adverse effect |
|---|---|---|
| Antiarrhythmics | Amiodarone, propafenone | QT prolongation, cardiac arrhythmias, bradycardia |
| Anxiolytics or antidepressants | Amitriptyline, imipramine, citalopram | QT prolongation, cardiac arrhythmias |
| Antibiotics | Azithromycin, ciprofloxacin, erythromycin | QT prolongation, cardiac arrhythmias |
| Antimicotic | Fluconazole | QT prolongation, cardiac arrhythmias |
| Beta-blockers | Sotalol, atenolol, metoprolol | Bradycardia, hypotension, cardiac conduction disturbance |
| Calcium channel blockers | Verapamil | Bradycardia, hypotension, cardiac conduction disturbance |
| Hypoglycemic agents | Acarbose, glyburide, glipizide | Reduce hypoglycemic agent efficacy |
| Dopamine agonists | Bromocriptine | Hypotension |
| Steroids | Prednisone, hydrocortisone | QT prolongation |
| Immune system suppressors | Cyclosporine | Decrease cyclosporine levels |
| Contraindicated | Cisapride, dronedarone, pimozide, quinine, saquinavir, thioridazine, toremifene | QT prolongation, cardiac arrhythmias |
Abbreviation: LAR, long-acting release.