pasireotide and Glucose-Intolerance

pasireotide has been researched along with Glucose-Intolerance* in 2 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for pasireotide and Glucose-Intolerance

ArticleYear
Pharmacologic therapies for acromegaly: a review of their effects on glucose metabolism and insulin resistance.
    Treatments in endocrinology, 2005, Volume: 4, Issue:1

    Acromegaly is associated with insulin resistance and an increased incidence of cardiovascular disease. However, it remains unclear to what extent the effects of growth hormone (GH) excess on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality are mediated through insulin resistance versus through other direct or indirect effects of GH. Adequate control of GH excess by surgery or pharmacologic interventions is associated with decreased insulin resistance, reflected in decreased plasma insulin levels and fasting glucose levels or improved glucose tolerance. Despite divergent effects of both somatostatin and somatostatin analogs on GH, insulin and glucagon secretion, and glucose absorption, treatment with the somatostatin analogs octreotide and lanreotide has only limited effects on glucose metabolism. However, glucose sensitivity has only been formally examined using a hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp in a minority of these studies. Treatment with the GH-receptor antagonist pegvisomant ameliorates insulin sensitivity, reflected in decreased fasting plasma insulin levels and fasting glucose levels. Nonetheless, the effect of pegvisomant on glucose sensitivity has not been formally tested by hyperinsulinemic clamp conditions. In acromegaly, preliminary observations on new octreotide analogs with greater specificity for somatostatin-receptor subtypes indicate that these compounds achieve better control of GH hypersecretion than octreotide, but may also negatively influence insulin release. Assessment of insulin secretion and glucose levels in acromegalic patients during administration of these compounds is thus mandatory.

    Topics: Acromegaly; Animals; Blood Glucose; Glucose Intolerance; Growth Hormone; Humans; Insulin; Insulin Resistance; Insulin Secretion; Insulin-Like Growth Factor I; Octreotide; Peptides, Cyclic; Receptors, Somatostatin; Receptors, Somatotropin; Somatostatin

2005

Trials

1 trial(s) available for pasireotide and Glucose-Intolerance

ArticleYear
Pasireotide monotherapy in Cushing's disease: a single-centre experience with 5-year extension of phase III Trial.
    Pituitary, 2014, Volume: 17, Issue:6

    A recent phase III randomized controlled trial (NCT00434148) showed efficacy of pasireotide in the treatment of patients with Cushing's disease (CD). Patients were invited to participate in an extension phase of the protocol and a subgroup had a sustained response. We report the experience with 4 patients in our center of which 2 full responders have completed 5.5 and 4.25 years of treatment with disease control.. The trial protocol was described previously. The extension phase consisted of 3-monthly visits with clinical, biochemical, and imaging evaluation and investigator-driven pasireotide titration. Research charts were retrospectively analyzed.. Four patients with persistent CD following pituitary surgery completed the first 6 months of the trial and 3 continued in the next 6 month open-label phase. Two patients with baseline urinary free cortisol (UFC) 5.3-6.7 times the upper limit of normal had a rapid sustained response to pasireotide and entered the extension phase after 12 months. They remain in clinical and biochemical disease remission and 1 patient now only requires 300 μg daily of pasireotide. All 4 patients developed glucose intolerance; however, the two patients in the extension phase were eventually able to discontinue all diabetes pharmacotherapy. Adverse events included second degree atrioventicular block type 1 without QT prolongation in a patient with pre-existing sinus bradycardia, and symptomatic cholelithiasis requiring cholecystectomy in a second patient.. Pasireotide therapy can provide normalization of UFC and of clinical symptoms and signs of CD during up to 5 years of follow-up. This study demonstrates the possible recuperation of normoglycemia after continued use of pasireotide and control of underlying hypercortisolemia. Longer-term monitoring for potential adverse events related to continued use of pasireotide is indicated.

    Topics: Adult; Cohort Studies; Electrocardiography; Female; Glucose Intolerance; Humans; Hydrocortisone; Male; Middle Aged; Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion; Somatostatin; Syncope; Treatment Outcome

2014