Purpose: Aim of this study was to examine the probability of achieving acromegaly disease control according to several patient-, disease- and treatment-related factors longitudinally. Methods: We analyzed data from ACROSTUDY, an open-label, non-interventional, post-marketing safety surveillance study conducted in 15 countries. 1546 patients with acromegaly and treated with pegvisomant, with available information on baseline IGF-1 level, were included. Factors influencing IGF-1 control were assessed up to 10 years of follow-up by mixed effects logistic regression models, keeping into account changing values of covariates at baseline and at yearly visits. Twenty-eight anthropometric, clinical, and treatment-related covariates were examined through univariate and multivariate analyses. We tested whether the probability of non-control was different than 0.50 (50%) by computing effect sizes (ES) and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: Univariate analysis showed that age <40 years, normal or overweight, baseline IGF-1<300 ug/L or ranged between 300 and 500ug/L, and all pegvisomant dose <20mg/day were associated with a lower probability of acromegaly uncontrol. Consistently, in multivariate analyses, the probability of uncontrolled acromegaly was influenced by baseline IGF-1 value: patients with IGF-1<300 ug/L had the lowest risk of not-controlled acromegaly (ES=0.29, 95%CI:0.23-0.36). The probability of acromegaly uncontrol was also lower for values 300-<500ug/L (ES=0.37, 95%CI:0.32-0.43), while it was higher for baseline IGF-1 values ≥700ug/L (ES=0.58, 95%CI:0.53-0.64). Conclusions: Baseline IGF-l levels were a good predictor factor for long-term acromegaly control. On the contrary, our data did not support a role of age, sex, BMI, and pegvisomant dose as predictors of long-term control of acromegaly.

Factors associated with disease control failure in acromegaly patients treated with pegvisomant: an ACROSTUDY analysis / Giampietro, Antonella; Chiloiro, Sabrina; Urbani, C; Pivonello, Rosario; Carlsson, Martin Ove; Dassie, Francesca; Prencipe, Nunzia; Ragonese, Marta; Gomez, Roy; Granato, Simona; Cannavò, Salvatore; Grottoli, Silvia; Maffei, Pietro; Colao, Annamaria; Bogazzi, Fausto; Bianchi, Antonio. - In: ENDOCRINE CONNECTIONS. - ISSN 2049-3614. - (2024). [10.1530/EC-23-0247]

Factors associated with disease control failure in acromegaly patients treated with pegvisomant: an ACROSTUDY analysis

Pivonello, Rosario;Colao, Annamaria;
2024

Abstract

Purpose: Aim of this study was to examine the probability of achieving acromegaly disease control according to several patient-, disease- and treatment-related factors longitudinally. Methods: We analyzed data from ACROSTUDY, an open-label, non-interventional, post-marketing safety surveillance study conducted in 15 countries. 1546 patients with acromegaly and treated with pegvisomant, with available information on baseline IGF-1 level, were included. Factors influencing IGF-1 control were assessed up to 10 years of follow-up by mixed effects logistic regression models, keeping into account changing values of covariates at baseline and at yearly visits. Twenty-eight anthropometric, clinical, and treatment-related covariates were examined through univariate and multivariate analyses. We tested whether the probability of non-control was different than 0.50 (50%) by computing effect sizes (ES) and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: Univariate analysis showed that age <40 years, normal or overweight, baseline IGF-1<300 ug/L or ranged between 300 and 500ug/L, and all pegvisomant dose <20mg/day were associated with a lower probability of acromegaly uncontrol. Consistently, in multivariate analyses, the probability of uncontrolled acromegaly was influenced by baseline IGF-1 value: patients with IGF-1<300 ug/L had the lowest risk of not-controlled acromegaly (ES=0.29, 95%CI:0.23-0.36). The probability of acromegaly uncontrol was also lower for values 300-<500ug/L (ES=0.37, 95%CI:0.32-0.43), while it was higher for baseline IGF-1 values ≥700ug/L (ES=0.58, 95%CI:0.53-0.64). Conclusions: Baseline IGF-l levels were a good predictor factor for long-term acromegaly control. On the contrary, our data did not support a role of age, sex, BMI, and pegvisomant dose as predictors of long-term control of acromegaly.
2024
Factors associated with disease control failure in acromegaly patients treated with pegvisomant: an ACROSTUDY analysis / Giampietro, Antonella; Chiloiro, Sabrina; Urbani, C; Pivonello, Rosario; Carlsson, Martin Ove; Dassie, Francesca; Prencipe, Nunzia; Ragonese, Marta; Gomez, Roy; Granato, Simona; Cannavò, Salvatore; Grottoli, Silvia; Maffei, Pietro; Colao, Annamaria; Bogazzi, Fausto; Bianchi, Antonio. - In: ENDOCRINE CONNECTIONS. - ISSN 2049-3614. - (2024). [10.1530/EC-23-0247]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/950927
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