Pegvisomant-Induced Cholestatic Hepatitis in an Acromegalic Patient with UGT1A1 ​  ⁎  28 Mutation

  • Mallea-Gil M
  • Bernabeu I
  • Spiraquis A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Pegvisomant (PEGv) is a growth hormone receptor antagonist approved for the treatment of acromegaly; one of its documented adverse effects is reversible elevation of hepatic enzymes. We report a 39-year-old male acromegalic patient with a pituitary macroadenoma who underwent transsphenoidal surgery. The patient’s condition improved but GH and IGF-I levels did not normalize; as a consequence, we first administered dopamine agonists and then somatostatin receptor ligands (SRLs) with poor response. PEGv 15 mg every other day was added to lanreotide 120 mg monthly. The patient developed a severe hepatitis five months after starting the combination therapy. Elevated ferritin, iron, and transferrin saturation suggested probable hepatitis due to haemochromatosis. We performed a liver biopsy which showed an acute cholestatic hepatitis consistent with toxic etiology. A heterozygous genotype UGT1A1 ​ ⁎  28 polymorphism associated with Gilbert’s syndrome was also found in this Argentine patient. The predominant clinical presentation resembled an acute cholestatic hepatitis associated with severe hemosiderosis, a different and new pattern of PEGv hepatotoxicity.

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Mallea-Gil, M. S., Bernabeu, I., Spiraquis, A., Avangina, A., Loidi, L., & Ballarino, C. (2016). Pegvisomant-Induced Cholestatic Hepatitis in an Acromegalic Patient with UGT1A1      ​   ⁎       28 Mutation. Case Reports in Endocrinology, 2016, 1–5. https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/2087102

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