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 ≥6 month conventional SSA therapy. Methods: Patients with ≥ 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. © 2009 European Society of Endocrinology.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Giustina, A., Bonadonna, S., Bugari, G., Colao, A., Cozzi, R., Cannavo, S., … Ghigo, E. (2009). High-dose intramuscular octreotide in patients with acromegaly inadequately controlled on conventional somatostatin analogue therapy: A randomised controlled trial. European Journal of Endocrinology, 161(2), 331–338. https://doi.org/10.1530/EJE-09-0372
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.