Pegvisomant and pasireotide in PRL and GH co-secreting vs GH-secreting Pit-NETs.

Abstract

The objective of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of second-line therapies in patients with acromegaly caused by a growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) co-secreting pituitary neuroendocrine tumor (GH&PRL-Pit-NET) compared to their efficacy in patients with acromegaly caused by a GH-secreting pituitary neuroendocrine tumor (GH-Pit-NET). This is a multicenter retrospective study of patients with acromegaly on treatment with pasireotide and/or pegvisomant. Patients were classified in two groups: GH&PRL-Pit-NETs when evidence of hyperprolactinemia and immunohistochemistry (IHC) for GH and PRL was positive or if PRL were >200 ng/dL regardless of the PRL-IHC and GH-Pit-NETs when the previously mentioned criteria were not met. A total of 28 cases with GH&PRL-Pit-NETs and 122 with GH-Pit-NETs met the inclusion criteria. GH&PRL-Pit-NETs presented at a younger age, caused hypopituitarism, and were invasive more frequently than GH-Pit-NETs. There were 124 patients treated with pegvisomant and 49 with pasireotide at any time. The efficacy of pegvisomant for IGF-1 normalization was of 81.5% and of pasireotide of 71.4%. No differences in IGF-1 control with pasireotide and with pegvisomant were observed between GH&PRL-Pit-NETs and GH-Pit-NETs. All GH&PRL-Pit-NET cases treated with pasireotide (n = 6) and 82.6% (n = 19/23) of the cases treated with pegvisomant normalized PRL levels. No differences in the rate of IGF-1 control between pegvisomant and pasireotide were detected in patients with GH&PRL-Pit-NETs (84.9% vs 66.7%, P = 0.178). We conclude that despite the more aggressive behavior of GH&PRL-Pit-NETs than GH-Pit-NETs, no differences in the rate of IGF-1 control with pegvisomant and pasireotide were observed between both groups, and both drugs have shown to be effective treatments to control IGF-1 and PRL hypersecretion in these tumors.

Overview publication

TitlePegvisomant and pasireotide in PRL and GH co-secreting vs GH-secreting Pit-NETs.
Date2024-07-01
Issue nameEndocrine-related cancer
Issue numberv31.7
DOI10.1530/ERC-24-0043
PubMed38713182
AuthorsAraujo-Castro M, Biagetti B, Menéndez Torre E, Novoa-Testa I, Cordido F, Pascual-Corrales E, Rodríguez Berrocal V, Guerrero-Pérez F, Vicente A, Percovich Hualpa JC, García-Centeno R, González-Fernández L, Ollero García MD, Irigaray Echarri A, Moure Rodríguez MD, Novo-Rodríguez C, Calatayud M, Villar-Taibo R, Bernabéu I, Alvarez-Escola C, Benítez Valderrama P, Tenorio-Jiménez C, Abellán Galiana P, Venegas E, González-Molero I, Iglesias P, Blanco-Carrera C, Vidal-Ostos De Lara F, de Miguel Novoa P, López Mezquita E, Hanzu FA, Aldecoa I, Aznar S, Lamas C, Aulinas A, Asla Q, Gracia Gimeno P, Recio-Córdova JM, Avilés-Pérez MD, Asensio-Wandosell D, Sampedro-Núñez M, Cámara R, Paja Fano M, Ruz-Caracuel I, Fajardo C, Marazuela M & Puig-Domingo M
Keywordsacromegaly, pasireotide, pegvisomant, pituitary neuroendocrine tumors, prolactin
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