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Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study

Background: Metyrapone is a steroidogenesis inhibitor approved in Europe for the treatment of endogenous Cushing’s syndrome (CS) based on observational retrospective studies published over more than 50 years. We present data from the first prospective study designed to confirm metyrapone efficacy an...

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Autores principales: Nieman, Lynnette K, Boscaro, Marco, Scaroni, Carla Maria, Deutschbein, Timo, Mezosi, Emese, Driessens, Natacha, Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela, Hubalewska-D, Alicja, Berker, Dilek, Jarzab, Barbara Maria, Maiter, Dominique M, Reincke, Martin, Loli, Paola, Zampetti, Benedetta, Atmaca, Ayşegül, Badiu, Corin P, Beckers, Albert M, Bolanowski, Marek, Cavagnini, Francesco, Unger, Nicole, Giordano, Roberta, Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra, Terzolo, Massimo, Bostnavaron, Martine, Toth, Miklos
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090655/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1053
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author Nieman, Lynnette K
Boscaro, Marco
Scaroni, Carla Maria
Deutschbein, Timo
Mezosi, Emese
Driessens, Natacha
Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela
Hubalewska-D, Alicja
Berker, Dilek
Jarzab, Barbara Maria
Maiter, Dominique M
Reincke, Martin
Loli, Paola
Zampetti, Benedetta
Atmaca, Ayşegül
Badiu, Corin P
Beckers, Albert M
Bolanowski, Marek
Cavagnini, Francesco
Unger, Nicole
Giordano, Roberta
Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra
Terzolo, Massimo
Bostnavaron, Martine
Toth, Miklos
author_facet Nieman, Lynnette K
Boscaro, Marco
Scaroni, Carla Maria
Deutschbein, Timo
Mezosi, Emese
Driessens, Natacha
Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela
Hubalewska-D, Alicja
Berker, Dilek
Jarzab, Barbara Maria
Maiter, Dominique M
Reincke, Martin
Loli, Paola
Zampetti, Benedetta
Atmaca, Ayşegül
Badiu, Corin P
Beckers, Albert M
Bolanowski, Marek
Cavagnini, Francesco
Unger, Nicole
Giordano, Roberta
Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra
Terzolo, Massimo
Bostnavaron, Martine
Toth, Miklos
author_sort Nieman, Lynnette K
collection PubMed
description Background: Metyrapone is a steroidogenesis inhibitor approved in Europe for the treatment of endogenous Cushing’s syndrome (CS) based on observational retrospective studies published over more than 50 years. We present data from the first prospective study designed to confirm metyrapone efficacy and good tolerance in patients with CS. Methods: This single arm, open-label, multicenter, international trial enrolled 50 patients with CS who had three baseline 24 hours urine free cortisol (UFC) values at least 50% above the upper limit of normal (ULN=165 nmol/24h). Metyrapone was titrated over 12 weeks (W12) to achieve normal urine (mean of 3 values, mUFC) and serum cortisol levels. Patients whose mUFC did not exceed 2-fold the ULN could enter a 6-month extension period. The primary efficacy endpoint was the proportion of patients with mUFC ≤ ULN at W12 assessed in a central laboratory using LC-MS/MS. The most important secondary endpoint was mUFC decrease of ≥ 50% at W12. Results: At baseline: mean age was 47 years, median mUFC (range) was 570 (291 - 8476) nmol/24h (3.5 x ULN). Hypercortisolism was in 96% of patients either moderate (mUFC ≥ 2xULN; < 5x ULN) in 63% or severe (≥5 x ULN) in 33%. Hypertension (69%) and diabetes mellitus (47%) were the most common comorbidities. At W12: 47% (23/ 49) met primary endpoint. Another 40% (19 / 49) had mUFC ≤ 2xULN. Median percentage decrease in mUFC from baseline to W12 was -74%. Secondary endpoint was met by 80% of patients who had a mUFC decrease of 50%. Final median metyrapone dose was 1500 (250; 5500) mg/day. Physical signs and symptoms were normalized or improved in 66% of patients. Circulating cholesterol, HbA1C and fasting glucose and insulin improved with median decrease of 12%, 3%, 5% and 9% respectively and median systolic and diastolic blood pressure also decreased by 4 and 5mmHg respectively. Among patients with antihypertensive treatments, 10 (31%) had a decrease in number of drugs and 5 (16%) had an increase in number of drugs during the study. Median ACTH increased by 11 % from baseline. Twenty six (52%) patients experienced mild to moderate study drug related adverse events (AEs). One patient discontinued before W12 because of an unrelated SAE on day 2 (pneumonia with septic shock). The most common AEs were nausea (24%), decreased appetite (18%), fatigue (14%), headache (10%), peripheral edema (6.0%), hypokalemia (6.0%) and hypertension (6.0%). Reversible adrenal insufficiency occurred in 6 (12%) patients. Few patients 14% (7/50) experienced at least one AE that led to a dose interruption or dose adjustment. Cushing Quality of Life Questionnaire increased of 10 points from baseline which is close to minimal clinically important difference = 10.1. Conclusions: This prospective study in patients with CS confirms that metyrapone effectively lowers UFC levels with a tolerability profile similar to the previously reported safety profile and improves QoL, at Week 12.
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spelling pubmed-80906552021-05-12 Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study Nieman, Lynnette K Boscaro, Marco Scaroni, Carla Maria Deutschbein, Timo Mezosi, Emese Driessens, Natacha Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela Hubalewska-D, Alicja Berker, Dilek Jarzab, Barbara Maria Maiter, Dominique M Reincke, Martin Loli, Paola Zampetti, Benedetta Atmaca, Ayşegül Badiu, Corin P Beckers, Albert M Bolanowski, Marek Cavagnini, Francesco Unger, Nicole Giordano, Roberta Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra Terzolo, Massimo Bostnavaron, Martine Toth, Miklos J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Background: Metyrapone is a steroidogenesis inhibitor approved in Europe for the treatment of endogenous Cushing’s syndrome (CS) based on observational retrospective studies published over more than 50 years. We present data from the first prospective study designed to confirm metyrapone efficacy and good tolerance in patients with CS. Methods: This single arm, open-label, multicenter, international trial enrolled 50 patients with CS who had three baseline 24 hours urine free cortisol (UFC) values at least 50% above the upper limit of normal (ULN=165 nmol/24h). Metyrapone was titrated over 12 weeks (W12) to achieve normal urine (mean of 3 values, mUFC) and serum cortisol levels. Patients whose mUFC did not exceed 2-fold the ULN could enter a 6-month extension period. The primary efficacy endpoint was the proportion of patients with mUFC ≤ ULN at W12 assessed in a central laboratory using LC-MS/MS. The most important secondary endpoint was mUFC decrease of ≥ 50% at W12. Results: At baseline: mean age was 47 years, median mUFC (range) was 570 (291 - 8476) nmol/24h (3.5 x ULN). Hypercortisolism was in 96% of patients either moderate (mUFC ≥ 2xULN; < 5x ULN) in 63% or severe (≥5 x ULN) in 33%. Hypertension (69%) and diabetes mellitus (47%) were the most common comorbidities. At W12: 47% (23/ 49) met primary endpoint. Another 40% (19 / 49) had mUFC ≤ 2xULN. Median percentage decrease in mUFC from baseline to W12 was -74%. Secondary endpoint was met by 80% of patients who had a mUFC decrease of 50%. Final median metyrapone dose was 1500 (250; 5500) mg/day. Physical signs and symptoms were normalized or improved in 66% of patients. Circulating cholesterol, HbA1C and fasting glucose and insulin improved with median decrease of 12%, 3%, 5% and 9% respectively and median systolic and diastolic blood pressure also decreased by 4 and 5mmHg respectively. Among patients with antihypertensive treatments, 10 (31%) had a decrease in number of drugs and 5 (16%) had an increase in number of drugs during the study. Median ACTH increased by 11 % from baseline. Twenty six (52%) patients experienced mild to moderate study drug related adverse events (AEs). One patient discontinued before W12 because of an unrelated SAE on day 2 (pneumonia with septic shock). The most common AEs were nausea (24%), decreased appetite (18%), fatigue (14%), headache (10%), peripheral edema (6.0%), hypokalemia (6.0%) and hypertension (6.0%). Reversible adrenal insufficiency occurred in 6 (12%) patients. Few patients 14% (7/50) experienced at least one AE that led to a dose interruption or dose adjustment. Cushing Quality of Life Questionnaire increased of 10 points from baseline which is close to minimal clinically important difference = 10.1. Conclusions: This prospective study in patients with CS confirms that metyrapone effectively lowers UFC levels with a tolerability profile similar to the previously reported safety profile and improves QoL, at Week 12. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8090655/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1053 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
Nieman, Lynnette K
Boscaro, Marco
Scaroni, Carla Maria
Deutschbein, Timo
Mezosi, Emese
Driessens, Natacha
Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela
Hubalewska-D, Alicja
Berker, Dilek
Jarzab, Barbara Maria
Maiter, Dominique M
Reincke, Martin
Loli, Paola
Zampetti, Benedetta
Atmaca, Ayşegül
Badiu, Corin P
Beckers, Albert M
Bolanowski, Marek
Cavagnini, Francesco
Unger, Nicole
Giordano, Roberta
Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra
Terzolo, Massimo
Bostnavaron, Martine
Toth, Miklos
Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study
title Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study
title_full Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study
title_fullStr Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study
title_full_unstemmed Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study
title_short Metyrapone Treatment in Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome: Results at Week 12 From PROMPT, a Prospective International Multicenter, Open-Label, Phase III/IV Study
title_sort metyrapone treatment in endogenous cushing’s syndrome: results at week 12 from prompt, a prospective international multicenter, open-label, phase iii/iv study
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090655/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1053
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