Long-term efficacy and tolerability of octreotide treatment in acromegaly
Autor: | S. E. Christensen, Kaal A, Jens Otto Lunde Jørgensen, E. Lund, H. Ørskov, J. Weeke, A.G. Harris |
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Rok vydání: | 1992 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Blood Glucose Male medicine.medical_specialty Adenoma Injections Subcutaneous Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Octreotide Thyroid Function Tests Drug Administration Schedule Endocrinology Cholelithiasis Internal medicine Acromegaly medicine Humans Longitudinal Studies Triiodothyronine business.industry Middle Aged medicine.disease Somatostatin Tolerability Growth Hormone Immunoglobulin G Female Thyroid function business Hormone medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Metabolism. 41:44-50 |
ISSN: | 0026-0495 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0026-0495(92)90030-e |
Popis: | Twenty-five acromegalic patients were studied during 6 years of treatment with octreotide, with a particular focus on the following parameters: (1) Administration schedule: in 10 patients, continuous subcutaneous (SC) octreotide infusion was compared with injections of octreotide at three dose levels ( 100, 250, and 1,500 μ g 24 h ) and was found to induce a greater and less-fluctuating 24-hour growth hormone (GH) suppression. (2) Carbohydrate tolerance: average 24-hour blood glucose levels were unaffected by octreotide, regardless of administration schedule. Oral carbohydrate tolerance and intravenous (IV) glucose tolerance were unaffected by continuous octreotide infusion. However, octreotide injection given shortly before the tests reduced carbohydrate tolerance. (3) Thyroid function: octreotide and somatostatin acutely reduce the response of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH). After a few days of treatment, it was demonstrated that octreotide slightly inhibits iodothyronine deiodination and induces a transient reduction in serum triiodothyronine (T3), rapidly compensated for by a persistent slight elevation of serum TSH. (4) Fat absorption was estimated as 24-hour fecal fat content and found to be in the same high-normal range before and after octreotide treatment. Vitamin K and D absorption were unaffected by octreotide. The incidence of gallstone formation was not greater than in the general Danish population, possibly due to the schedule used for octreotide injections. (5) Foot volume was regularly estimated and found to decrease with time, on average by 12% during the first 18 months. (6) Sellar volume was studied by computed tomography (CT) and found to decrease during octreotide treatment and also in patients with microadenoma, probably due to decreased adenoma volume with reduced pressure on the bony structures. (7) Antibodies against octreotide were found in two of 25 acromegalic patients after approximately 2.5 years of treatment. They were IgGs, did not cross-react with native somatostatin, and did not have any apparent effects except for prolonging octreotide half-life and GH suppression. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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