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Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study

Endogenous Cushing’s syndrome (CS) is a rare, serious disorder caused by chronic cortisol excess. A phase 3, open-label study (SONICS) demonstrated efficacy and safety of levoketoconazole in adults with CS. LOGICS is a phase 3, double-blind (DB), placebo-controlled, randomized-withdrawal (R-W) study...

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Autores principales: Zacharieva, Sabina, Pivonello, Rosario, Elenkova, Atanaska, Toth, Miklos, Shimon, Ilan, Stigliano, Antonio, Badiu, Corin P, Brue, Thierry Christian, Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela, Tsagarakis, Stylianos, Cohen, Fredric J, Fleseriu, Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090707/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1072
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author Zacharieva, Sabina
Pivonello, Rosario
Elenkova, Atanaska
Toth, Miklos
Shimon, Ilan
Stigliano, Antonio
Badiu, Corin P
Brue, Thierry Christian
Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela
Tsagarakis, Stylianos
Cohen, Fredric J
Fleseriu, Maria
author_facet Zacharieva, Sabina
Pivonello, Rosario
Elenkova, Atanaska
Toth, Miklos
Shimon, Ilan
Stigliano, Antonio
Badiu, Corin P
Brue, Thierry Christian
Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela
Tsagarakis, Stylianos
Cohen, Fredric J
Fleseriu, Maria
author_sort Zacharieva, Sabina
collection PubMed
description Endogenous Cushing’s syndrome (CS) is a rare, serious disorder caused by chronic cortisol excess. A phase 3, open-label study (SONICS) demonstrated efficacy and safety of levoketoconazole in adults with CS. LOGICS is a phase 3, double-blind (DB), placebo-controlled, randomized-withdrawal (R-W) study that investigated levoketoconazole in adults with CS via an open-label titration-maintenance (T-M) phase (14-19 weeks) followed by a DB R-W phase (~8 weeks) and a restoration phase (~8 weeks). The primary endpoint is the proportion of patients with loss of mean urinary free cortisol (mUFC) response during R-W (ie, mUFC ≥1.5x ULN or mUFC >40% above baseline if baseline was >1.0x ULN, or other rescue criterion met). Key secondary endpoints include mUFC normalization and changes in comorbidity biomarkers at the end of R-W. Of 84 patients dosed in LOGICS (12 SONICS-completers and 72 de novo), 79 were titrated (72 de novo) and 44 patients (39 from T-M and 5 direct roll-overs from SONICS) were randomized 1:1 to receive levoketoconazole (n=22) at an individualized therapeutic dose or a matching placebo regimen (n=22). The R-W population mean age was 44.3 years, 77% were female, 91% were white, mean weight was 83.2 kg, and 86% had Cushing’s disease. Selected results from an interim analysis at the end of R-W are presented. At the end of R-W, significantly more patients on placebo (95.5%) achieved primary endpoint of loss of mUFC response than those who continued on levoketoconazole (40.9%) (treatment difference [TD], -54.5%; 95% CI: -75.7, -27.4; P=0.0002). Similarly, the mUFC normalization rate at the end of R-W was significantly higher for levoketoconazole (50.0%) versus placebo (4.5%; TD, 45.5%; 95% CI: 19.2, 67.9; P=0.0015). Mean change from R-W baseline to end of R-W in total cholesterol was -1.4 mg/dL for levoketoconazole and +35.6 mg/dL for placebo (P=0.0004); mean change in LDL cholesterol was -0.2 mg/dL and +25.0 mg/dL, respectively (P=0.0056). Mean change in glycemia markers and high sensitivity C-reactive protein were not significantly different between treatment groups. 90% of levoketoconazole-treated patients across the T-M and R-W phases (n=80) had ≥1 treatment-emergent adverse event (AE); AEs led to treatment discontinuation in 19% (15/80) of patients, 11% (9/80) of which were considered treatment-related. The most common AEs were nausea (29%), hypokalemia (28%), and headache (21%); serious AEs drug related were reported in 4 patients (3 liver-related, 1 gastroenteritis, 1 hypokalemia); AEs of special interest included liver-related (11%), QT prolongation (10%), and adrenal insufficiency (10%). These LOGICS interim results confirm the safety and efficacy findings from SONICS, establishing treatment benefit as levoketoconazole specific. This evidence further supports the use of levoketoconazole as an important treatment option for endogenous CS. Support: Strongbridge Biopharma.
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spelling pubmed-80907072021-05-12 Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study Zacharieva, Sabina Pivonello, Rosario Elenkova, Atanaska Toth, Miklos Shimon, Ilan Stigliano, Antonio Badiu, Corin P Brue, Thierry Christian Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela Tsagarakis, Stylianos Cohen, Fredric J Fleseriu, Maria J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Endogenous Cushing’s syndrome (CS) is a rare, serious disorder caused by chronic cortisol excess. A phase 3, open-label study (SONICS) demonstrated efficacy and safety of levoketoconazole in adults with CS. LOGICS is a phase 3, double-blind (DB), placebo-controlled, randomized-withdrawal (R-W) study that investigated levoketoconazole in adults with CS via an open-label titration-maintenance (T-M) phase (14-19 weeks) followed by a DB R-W phase (~8 weeks) and a restoration phase (~8 weeks). The primary endpoint is the proportion of patients with loss of mean urinary free cortisol (mUFC) response during R-W (ie, mUFC ≥1.5x ULN or mUFC >40% above baseline if baseline was >1.0x ULN, or other rescue criterion met). Key secondary endpoints include mUFC normalization and changes in comorbidity biomarkers at the end of R-W. Of 84 patients dosed in LOGICS (12 SONICS-completers and 72 de novo), 79 were titrated (72 de novo) and 44 patients (39 from T-M and 5 direct roll-overs from SONICS) were randomized 1:1 to receive levoketoconazole (n=22) at an individualized therapeutic dose or a matching placebo regimen (n=22). The R-W population mean age was 44.3 years, 77% were female, 91% were white, mean weight was 83.2 kg, and 86% had Cushing’s disease. Selected results from an interim analysis at the end of R-W are presented. At the end of R-W, significantly more patients on placebo (95.5%) achieved primary endpoint of loss of mUFC response than those who continued on levoketoconazole (40.9%) (treatment difference [TD], -54.5%; 95% CI: -75.7, -27.4; P=0.0002). Similarly, the mUFC normalization rate at the end of R-W was significantly higher for levoketoconazole (50.0%) versus placebo (4.5%; TD, 45.5%; 95% CI: 19.2, 67.9; P=0.0015). Mean change from R-W baseline to end of R-W in total cholesterol was -1.4 mg/dL for levoketoconazole and +35.6 mg/dL for placebo (P=0.0004); mean change in LDL cholesterol was -0.2 mg/dL and +25.0 mg/dL, respectively (P=0.0056). Mean change in glycemia markers and high sensitivity C-reactive protein were not significantly different between treatment groups. 90% of levoketoconazole-treated patients across the T-M and R-W phases (n=80) had ≥1 treatment-emergent adverse event (AE); AEs led to treatment discontinuation in 19% (15/80) of patients, 11% (9/80) of which were considered treatment-related. The most common AEs were nausea (29%), hypokalemia (28%), and headache (21%); serious AEs drug related were reported in 4 patients (3 liver-related, 1 gastroenteritis, 1 hypokalemia); AEs of special interest included liver-related (11%), QT prolongation (10%), and adrenal insufficiency (10%). These LOGICS interim results confirm the safety and efficacy findings from SONICS, establishing treatment benefit as levoketoconazole specific. This evidence further supports the use of levoketoconazole as an important treatment option for endogenous CS. Support: Strongbridge Biopharma. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8090707/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1072 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
Zacharieva, Sabina
Pivonello, Rosario
Elenkova, Atanaska
Toth, Miklos
Shimon, Ilan
Stigliano, Antonio
Badiu, Corin P
Brue, Thierry Christian
Georgescu, Carmen Emanuela
Tsagarakis, Stylianos
Cohen, Fredric J
Fleseriu, Maria
Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study
title Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study
title_full Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study
title_fullStr Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study
title_full_unstemmed Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study
title_short Safety and Efficacy of Levoketoconazole in the Treatment of Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome (LOGICS): Results From a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Withdrawal Study
title_sort safety and efficacy of levoketoconazole in the treatment of endogenous cushing’s syndrome (logics): results from a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized withdrawal study
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090707/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1072
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