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Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study

CONTEXT: Biochemical control reduces morbidity and increases life expectancy in patients with acromegaly. With current medical therapies, including the gold standard octreotide long-acting-release (LAR), many patients do not achieve biochemical control. OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to demonstrate th...

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Autores principales: Colao, A., Bronstein, M. D., Freda, P., Gu, F., Shen, C.-C., Gadelha, M., Fleseriu, M., van der Lely, A. J., Farrall, A. J., Hermosillo Reséndiz, K., Ruffin, M., Chen, Y., Sheppard, M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Endocrine Society 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3965714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24423324
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2013-2480
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author Colao, A.
Bronstein, M. D.
Freda, P.
Gu, F.
Shen, C.-C.
Gadelha, M.
Fleseriu, M.
van der Lely, A. J.
Farrall, A. J.
Hermosillo Reséndiz, K.
Ruffin, M.
Chen, Y.
Sheppard, M.
author_facet Colao, A.
Bronstein, M. D.
Freda, P.
Gu, F.
Shen, C.-C.
Gadelha, M.
Fleseriu, M.
van der Lely, A. J.
Farrall, A. J.
Hermosillo Reséndiz, K.
Ruffin, M.
Chen, Y.
Sheppard, M.
author_sort Colao, A.
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: Biochemical control reduces morbidity and increases life expectancy in patients with acromegaly. With current medical therapies, including the gold standard octreotide long-acting-release (LAR), many patients do not achieve biochemical control. OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to demonstrate the superiority of pasireotide LAR over octreotide LAR in medically naive patients with acromegaly. DESIGN AND SETTING: We conducted a prospective, randomized, double-blind study at 84 sites in 27 countries. PATIENTS: A total of 358 patients with medically naive acromegaly (GH >5 μg/L or GH nadir ≥1 μg/L after an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and IGF-1 above the upper limit of normal) were enrolled. Patients either had previous pituitary surgery but no medical treatment or were de novo with a visible pituitary adenoma on magnetic resonance imaging. INTERVENTIONS: Patients received pasireotide LAR 40 mg/28 days (n = 176) or octreotide LAR 20 mg/28 days (n = 182) for 12 months. At months 3 and 7, titration to pasireotide LAR 60 mg or octreotide LAR 30 mg was permitted, but not mandatory, if GH ≥2.5μg/L and/or IGF-1 was above the upper limit of normal. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The main outcome measure was the proportion of patients in each treatment arm with biochemical control (GH <2.5 μg/L and normal IGF-1) at month 12. RESULTS: Biochemical control was achieved by significantly more pasireotide LAR patients than octreotide LAR patients (31.3% vs 19.2%; P = .007; 35.8% vs 20.9% when including patients with IGF-1 below the lower normal limit). In pasireotide LAR and octreotide LAR patients, respectively, 38.6% and 23.6% (P = .002) achieved normal IGF-1, and 48.3% and 51.6% achieved GH <2.5 μg/L. 31.0% of pasireotide LAR and 22.2% of octreotide LAR patients who did not achieve biochemical control did not receive the recommended dose increase. Hyperglycemia-related adverse events were more common with pasireotide LAR (57.3% vs 21.7%). CONCLUSIONS: Pasireotide LAR demonstrated superior efficacy over octreotide LAR and is a viable new treatment option for acromegaly.
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spelling pubmed-39657142014-04-02 Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study Colao, A. Bronstein, M. D. Freda, P. Gu, F. Shen, C.-C. Gadelha, M. Fleseriu, M. van der Lely, A. J. Farrall, A. J. Hermosillo Reséndiz, K. Ruffin, M. Chen, Y. Sheppard, M. J Clin Endocrinol Metab Endocrine Care CONTEXT: Biochemical control reduces morbidity and increases life expectancy in patients with acromegaly. With current medical therapies, including the gold standard octreotide long-acting-release (LAR), many patients do not achieve biochemical control. OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to demonstrate the superiority of pasireotide LAR over octreotide LAR in medically naive patients with acromegaly. DESIGN AND SETTING: We conducted a prospective, randomized, double-blind study at 84 sites in 27 countries. PATIENTS: A total of 358 patients with medically naive acromegaly (GH >5 μg/L or GH nadir ≥1 μg/L after an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and IGF-1 above the upper limit of normal) were enrolled. Patients either had previous pituitary surgery but no medical treatment or were de novo with a visible pituitary adenoma on magnetic resonance imaging. INTERVENTIONS: Patients received pasireotide LAR 40 mg/28 days (n = 176) or octreotide LAR 20 mg/28 days (n = 182) for 12 months. At months 3 and 7, titration to pasireotide LAR 60 mg or octreotide LAR 30 mg was permitted, but not mandatory, if GH ≥2.5μg/L and/or IGF-1 was above the upper limit of normal. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The main outcome measure was the proportion of patients in each treatment arm with biochemical control (GH <2.5 μg/L and normal IGF-1) at month 12. RESULTS: Biochemical control was achieved by significantly more pasireotide LAR patients than octreotide LAR patients (31.3% vs 19.2%; P = .007; 35.8% vs 20.9% when including patients with IGF-1 below the lower normal limit). In pasireotide LAR and octreotide LAR patients, respectively, 38.6% and 23.6% (P = .002) achieved normal IGF-1, and 48.3% and 51.6% achieved GH <2.5 μg/L. 31.0% of pasireotide LAR and 22.2% of octreotide LAR patients who did not achieve biochemical control did not receive the recommended dose increase. Hyperglycemia-related adverse events were more common with pasireotide LAR (57.3% vs 21.7%). CONCLUSIONS: Pasireotide LAR demonstrated superior efficacy over octreotide LAR and is a viable new treatment option for acromegaly. Endocrine Society 2014-03 2014-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3965714/ /pubmed/24423324 http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2013-2480 Text en Copyright © 2014 by The Endocrine Society This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Endocrine Care
Colao, A.
Bronstein, M. D.
Freda, P.
Gu, F.
Shen, C.-C.
Gadelha, M.
Fleseriu, M.
van der Lely, A. J.
Farrall, A. J.
Hermosillo Reséndiz, K.
Ruffin, M.
Chen, Y.
Sheppard, M.
Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study
title Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study
title_full Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study
title_fullStr Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study
title_full_unstemmed Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study
title_short Pasireotide Versus Octreotide in Acromegaly: A Head-to-Head Superiority Study
title_sort pasireotide versus octreotide in acromegaly: a head-to-head superiority study
topic Endocrine Care
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3965714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24423324
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2013-2480
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