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The Effects of Weekly Administration of 40 mg Pegvisomant or Placebo on Quality of Life and Insulin Sensitivity in Acromegalic Patients With Normal IGF-I Concentrations During Long-Term Treatment With Long-Acting Somatostatin Analogs


Phase 4
18 Years
80 Years
Not Enrolling
Both
Quality of Life, Acromegaly

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Trial Information

The Effects of Weekly Administration of 40 mg Pegvisomant or Placebo on Quality of Life and Insulin Sensitivity in Acromegalic Patients With Normal IGF-I Concentrations During Long-Term Treatment With Long-Acting Somatostatin Analogs


Introduction Both lanreotide (Somatulin Autosolution ™ (SL)) and octreotide (Sandostatin LAR
™ (LAR)) are equally effective in controlling disease activity in acromegalic subjects with
a normalization of serum insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels in roughly 65%.
However, SL is injected as a deep intramuscular injection, while LA is injected as a deep
subcutaneous injection. Physicians, involved in the treatment of acromegalic patients know
that biochemical control of the disease in their patients not necessarily means that all
those patients stop complaining. To address these issues, Sonino and co-workers studied with
several symptom questionnaires the effects on quality of life (QoL) of SL. Together with a
significant decrease in growth hormone (GH) and IGF-I, treatment with SL significantly
improved psychological distress, well-being and social fears (1). In another study on the
efficacy of the novel GH receptor antagonist pegvisomant to lower serum IGF-I
concentrations a questionnaire evaluating five clinical signs and symptoms of acromegaly
showed dose dependent significant differences from placebo (2). Recently, Webb and
co-workers reported the successful development of a disease-specific questionnaire suitable
to measure health-related quality of life in acromegaly (ACROQOL) (3).

No clear biochemical parameter appears to be available that correlates well with disease
activity related quality of life (4). At the same time, serum GH concentrations and serum
total IGF-I levels, but not QoL, are used as parameters to determine dosing of Sandostatin
LAR, or any of the available medical therapies for acromegaly (5-8).

The growth hormone receptor antagonist pegvisomant as monotherapy once daily normalizes
IGF-I in virtually all acromegalics (9;10), but pegvisomant monotherapy is also very costly.
Recently, we reported the results of a 42-week dose-finding study on the efficacy of the
combination of long-acting somatostatin analogues once monthly and pegvisomant once weekly
in 26 patients with active acromegaly. Pegvisomant dose was increased until IGF-I levels
normalized or until a weekly dose of 80 mg was reached. IGF-I levels normalized in 25 (95 %)
with a median weekly dose of 60 mg pegvisomant. There were no signs of pituitary tumor
growth but mild elevations in liver enzymes were observed in 10 patients (38%) (11). One of
the potential advantages of combining pegvisomant with somatostatin analogues is that
pegvisomant monotherapy improves insulin sensitivity compared to somatostatin analogues
(12;13), although it is unclear yet whether or not long-term pegvisomant administration
would improve insulin sensitivity in normal subjects (13;14). Therefore, one might expect
that pegvisomant monotherapy has beneficial effects on insulin sensitivity, compared to the
combination of both pegvisomant and somatostatin analogues, as the latter ones decrease
insulin sensitivity by several mechanisms (13;15).

Conclusion:

- So-called biochemically well controlled acromegalic subjects with normal serum IGF-I
concentrations frequently still have an impaired QoL.

- These subjects, when controlled by long-acting somatostatin analogs have impaired
insulin sensitivity because of the pharmacological properties of these somatostatin
analogs.

- We postulate that co-administration of the growth hormone receptor antagonist
pegvisomant will improve QoL and insulin sensitivity

Objectives:

1. To determine whether the addition of weekly pegvisomant administrations improves
quality of life

2. To determine whether the addition of weekly pegvisomant administrations improves
insulin sensitivity

Description of procedures:

- Patients on treatment with Sandostatin LAR (SL) 20 - 30 mg per months i.m. or patients
treated with Lanreotide autosolution (LA) 90 - 120 mg deep s.c. will be enrolled.

- For 4 months, and after randomization, all subjects will also receive weekly s.c.
injections of either placebo or a fixed dose of 40 mg pegvisomant

- After a 4 weeks wash-out period, patients will switch from either placebo to
pegvisomant or from pegvisomant to placebo

- Before, and after 2 and 4 months of each treatment period, serum efficacy parameters
and quality of life (AcroQol ™ , general QoL questionaire and PASQ Signs and Symptoms)
will be assessed.

- Before and after 4 months of each treatment period, pituitary tumor size and insulin
sensitivity (HOMA/SIGMA model (16)) will be assessed.

Subjects Twenty acromegalic subjects who are seen at regular intervals at our out-patient
facilities will be asked to participate. All subjects will be seen at the Clinical Research
Unit.

Inclusion criteria:

- Active acromegaly.

- Serum total IGF-I levels must have been normalized during long-term treatment with
long-acting somatostatin analogs

- Age between 18 and 80

Exclusion criteria:

- Any contra-indication for the use of long-acting somatostatin analogs, as e.g. the use
of anti-coagulants.

- Subjects with pituitary tumors that compress the optic chiasm

- Patients with insulin dependent diabetes

- Patients with cancer

- Patients with kidney- or liver function disturbances

- Fertile female patients that refuse to take contraceptives during the study

Study procedures Visit 1; baseline (week 0; 1 day prior to next monthly injection of
long-acting SRIF analog))

- Review inclusion and exclusion criteria

- Obtain written informed consent

- Conduct a medical history and physical examination; record vital signs.

- Blood sampling: fasting IGF-I, insulin, GH, glucose, HbA1c, liver functions, lipid
profile, free fatty acids, pegvisomant levels, pregnancy test in females.

- QoL assessment (AcroQol™/PASQ ™)

- MRI (recent MRI of < 3 months is also acceptable)

- Injection of the usual SL or LA dose

- randomization

- Start of weekly injections of 40 mg pegvisomant or placebo (16 injections in total)

Visit 2, 3 (week 8 and 16; one day prior of weekly study drug/placebo injection)

- Blood sampling: fasting IGF-I, insulin, GH, glucose, HbA1c, liver functions, lipid
profile, free fatty acids, pegvisomant levels

- QoL assessment (AcroQol™/PASQ ™)

- After week 16, all patients have their 4 weeks wash-out period

- MRI

Visit 4 (week 20; end of wash-out)

- Blood sampling: fasting IGF-I, insulin, GH, glucose, HbA1c, liver functions, lipid
profile, free fatty acids, pegvisomant levels

- Return of study medication for drug accountability

- QoL assessment (AcroQol™/PASQ ™)

- Start of second co-treatment period with weekly s.c injections of either placebo or 40
mg fixed-dose pegvisomant (16 weekly injections)

Visit 5, 6 (week 28 and 36; one day prior of weekly study drug/placebo injection)

- Blood sampling: fasting IGF-I, insulin, GH, glucose, HbA1c, liver functions, lipid
profile, free fatty acids, pegvisomant levels

- Return of study medication for drug accountability

- QoL assessment (AcroQol™/PASQ ™)

- MRI


Inclusion Criteria:



- Active acromegaly.

- Serum total IGF-I levels must have been normalized during long-term treatment with
long-acting somatostatin analogs

- Age between 18 and 80

Exclusion Criteria:

- Any contra-indication for the use of long-acting somatostatin analogs, as e.g. the
use of anti-coagulants.

- Subjects with pituitary tumors that compress the optic chiasm

- Patients with insulin dependent diabetes

- Patients with cancer

- Patients with kidney- or liver function disturbances

- Fertile female patients that refuse to take contraceptives during the study

Type of Study:

Interventional

Study Design:

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment

Outcome Measure:

To assess if the addition of pegvisomant weekly will improve Quality of life (QoL). QoL will be assessed by the PASQ and AcroQol questionnaires

Outcome Time Frame:

at 8 and 16 weeks of treatment

Safety Issue:

No

Authority:

Netherlands: The Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (CCMO)

Study ID:

*P05.1649L

NCT ID:

NCT00642720

Start Date:

October 2006

Completion Date:

July 2007

Related Keywords:

  • Quality of Life
  • Acromegaly
  • Acromegaly

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