Clinical Trial
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Coadministration of lanreotide Autogel and pegvisomant normalizes IGF1 levels and is well tolerated in patients with acromegaly partially controlled by somatostatin analogs alone.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of coadministered lanreotide Autogel (LA; 120  mg/month) and pegvisomant (40-120  mg/week) in acromegaly.

DESIGN: This is a 28-week, multicenter, open-label, single-arm sequential study.

METHODS: Patients (n=92) biochemically uncontrolled, on somatostatin analogs (SSAs) or using pegvisomant monotherapy entered a 4-month run-in taking LA (120  mg/month). Patients uncontrolled after the run-in period (n=57) entered a 28-week coadministration period, receiving LA 120  mg/month plus pegvisomant (60  mg once weekly, adapted every 8 weeks based on IGF1 levels to 40-80  mg once weekly or 40 or 60  mg twice weekly).

RESULTS: In total, 33 (57.9%) patients had normalized IGF1 following coadministration (P<0.0001 versus 30% minimum clinically relevant); median pegvisomant dose in normalized patients was 60  mg/week. IGF1 normalized at any time during coadministration in 45 (78.9%) patients (P<0.0001) with median pegvisomant dose at 60  mg/week. Being nondiabetic (odds ratio (OR): 4.65) and older (OR, upper versus lower quartile: 3.40) showed increased likelihood of normalization. Symptom reduction was greatest for arthralgia (-0.6 ± 1.6) and soft tissue swelling (-0.6 ± 1.8). Five patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events causing treatment withdrawal: three serious (treatment related - thrombocytopenia, urticaria; not treatment related - abdominal pain/vomiting) and two nonserious (hepatotoxicity and cytolytic hepatitis, both elevating alanine aminotransferase to >5 × upper limit of normal with normalization after withdrawal).

CONCLUSIONS: In patients partially controlled by SSAs, LA (120  mg/month) plus pegvisomant normalized IGF1 in 57.9% of patients after 7 months, at a median effective pegvisomant dose of 60  mg/week, and 78.9% at any time. In these patients, results suggest a pegvisomant-sparing effect versus daily pegvisomant monotherapy.

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