TY - JOUR
T1 - More than a decade of real-world experience of pegvisomant for acromegaly
T2 - ACROSTUDY
AU - Fleseriu, Maria
AU - Führer-Sakel, Dagmar
AU - van der Lely, Aart J.
AU - De Marinis, Laura
AU - Brue, Thierry
AU - van der Lans-Bussemaker, Joli
AU - Hey-Hadavi, Judith
AU - Camacho-Hubner, Cecilia
AU - Wajnrajch, Michael P.
AU - Valluri, Srinivas Rao
AU - Palladino, Andrew Anthony
AU - Gomez, Roy
AU - Salvatori, Roberto
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The authors.
PY - 2021/10
Y1 - 2021/10
N2 - Objective: To report the final long-term safety and efficacy analyses of pati ents with acromegaly treated with pegvisomant from the ACROSTUDY. Design: Global (15 countries), multicentre, non-interventional study (2004-2017). Methods: The complete ACROSTUDY cohort comprised patients with acromegal y, who were being treated with pegvisomant (PEGV) prior to the study or at enrolment. The main endpoints were long-term safety (comorbidities, adverse events (AEs), pituitary tumour volumes, liver tests) an d efficacy (IGF1 changes). Results: Patients (n = 2221) were treated with PEGV for a median of 9.3 years (range, 0-20.8 years) and followed up for a median of 7.4 years (range, 0-13.9 years). Before PEGV, 96.3% had received other acromegaly treatments (surgery/ radiotherapy/medications). Before PEGV treatment, 87.2% of patients reported comorbidities. During ACROSTUDY, 5567 AEs were reported in 56.5% of patients and of these 613 were considered treatment-related (in 16.5% of patients) and led to drug withdrawal in 1.3%. Pituitary imaging showed a tumour size increase in 7.1% of patients; the majority (71.1%) reported no changes. Abnormal AST or ALT liver tests oc curred in 3.2% of patients. IGF1 normalization rate improved over time, increasing from 11.4% at PEGV start to 53.7 % at year 1, and reaching 75.4% at year 10 with the use of ≥30 mg PEGV/day in an increasing proportion of patients. Conclusion: This comprehensive review of the complete cohort in ACROSTUDY confirmed the overall favourable benefit-to-risk profile and high efficacy of PEGV as mono- and comb ination therapy in patients with an aggressive course/uncontrolled/active acromegaly requiring long-term medical therapy for control.
AB - Objective: To report the final long-term safety and efficacy analyses of pati ents with acromegaly treated with pegvisomant from the ACROSTUDY. Design: Global (15 countries), multicentre, non-interventional study (2004-2017). Methods: The complete ACROSTUDY cohort comprised patients with acromegal y, who were being treated with pegvisomant (PEGV) prior to the study or at enrolment. The main endpoints were long-term safety (comorbidities, adverse events (AEs), pituitary tumour volumes, liver tests) an d efficacy (IGF1 changes). Results: Patients (n = 2221) were treated with PEGV for a median of 9.3 years (range, 0-20.8 years) and followed up for a median of 7.4 years (range, 0-13.9 years). Before PEGV, 96.3% had received other acromegaly treatments (surgery/ radiotherapy/medications). Before PEGV treatment, 87.2% of patients reported comorbidities. During ACROSTUDY, 5567 AEs were reported in 56.5% of patients and of these 613 were considered treatment-related (in 16.5% of patients) and led to drug withdrawal in 1.3%. Pituitary imaging showed a tumour size increase in 7.1% of patients; the majority (71.1%) reported no changes. Abnormal AST or ALT liver tests oc curred in 3.2% of patients. IGF1 normalization rate improved over time, increasing from 11.4% at PEGV start to 53.7 % at year 1, and reaching 75.4% at year 10 with the use of ≥30 mg PEGV/day in an increasing proportion of patients. Conclusion: This comprehensive review of the complete cohort in ACROSTUDY confirmed the overall favourable benefit-to-risk profile and high efficacy of PEGV as mono- and comb ination therapy in patients with an aggressive course/uncontrolled/active acromegaly requiring long-term medical therapy for control.
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U2 - 10.1530/EJE-21-0239
DO - 10.1530/EJE-21-0239
M3 - Article
C2 - 34342594
AN - SCOPUS:85114617800
SN - 0804-4643
VL - 185
SP - 525
EP - 538
JO - European journal of endocrinology
JF - European journal of endocrinology
IS - 4
ER -