Published in:
Open Access
01-07-2017 | Original Article
Long-term treatment of Cushing’s disease with pasireotide: 5-year results from an open-label extension study of a Phase III trial
Authors:
S. Petersenn, L. R. Salgado, J. Schopohl, L. Portocarrero-Ortiz, G. Arnaldi, A. Lacroix, C. Scaroni, S. Ravichandran, A. Kandra, B. M. K. Biller
Published in:
Endocrine
|
Issue 1/2017
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Abstract
Background
Treating hypercortisolism in patients with Cushing’s disease after failed surgery often requires chronic medication, underlining the need for therapies with favourable long-term efficacy and safety profiles.
Methods
In a randomised, double-blind study, 162 adult patients with persistent/recurrent or de novo Cushing’s disease received pasireotide. Patients with mean urinary free cortisol at/below the upper limit of normal or clinical benefit at month 12 could continue receiving pasireotide during an open-ended, open-label phase, the outcomes of which are described herein.
Results
Sixteen patients received 5 years of pasireotide treatment. Among these, median (95% confidence interval) percentage change from baseline in mean urinary free cortisol was −82.6% (−89.0, −41.9) and −81.8% (−89.8, −67.4) at months 12 and 60. Eleven patients had mean urinary free cortisol ≤ upper limit of normal at month 60. Improvements in clinical signs were sustained during long-term treatment. The safety profile of pasireotide at 5 years was similar to that reported after 12 months. Fifteen of 16 patients experienced a hyperglycaemia-related adverse event; glycated haemoglobin levels were stable between months 6 and 60. Adverse events related to hyperglycaemia, bradycardia, gallbladder/biliary tract, and liver safety were most likely to first occur by month 6; adverse event severity did not tend to worsen over time.
Conclusions
This represents the longest prospective trial of a medical therapy for Cushing’s disease to date. A subset of patients treated with pasireotide maintained biochemical and clinical improvements for 5 years, with no new safety signals emerging. These data support the use of pasireotide as an effective long-term therapy for some patients with Cushing’s disease.