Resistance to Somatostatin Analogs in Acromegaly

被引:222
作者
Colao, Annamaria [1 ]
Auriemma, Renata S. [1 ]
Lombardi, Gaetano [1 ]
Pivonello, Rosario [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Clin & Mol Endocrinol & Oncol, I-80131 Naples, Italy
关键词
SECRETING PITUITARY-ADENOMAS; GROWTH-FACTOR-I; SLOW-RELEASE LANREOTIDE; LONG-ACTING OCTREOTIDE; HORMONE RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST; SIGNIFICANT TUMOR SHRINKAGE; ACTIVATED PROTEIN-KINASE; GLUCOSE-TOLERANCE TEST; GENE-EXPRESSION LEVELS; CELL-CYCLE ARREST;
D O I
10.1210/er.2010-0002
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Somatostatin analogs (SA) are widely used in acromegaly, either as first-line or adjuvant treatment after surgery. First-line treatment with these drugs is generally used in the patients with macroadenomas or in those with clinical conditions so severe as to prevent unsafe reactions during anesthesia. Generally, the response to SA takes into account both control of GH and IGF-I excess, with consequent improvement of clinical symptoms directly related to GH and IGF-I excess, and tumor shrinkage. This latter effect is more prominent in the patients treated first-line and bearing large macroadenomas, but it is also observed in patients with microadenomas, even with little clinical implication. Predictors of response are patients' gender, age, initial GH and IGF-I levels, and tumor mass, as well as adequate expression of somatostatin receptor types 2 and 5, those with the highest affinity for octreotide and lanreotide. Only sporadic cases of somatostatin receptor gene mutation or impaired signaling pathways have been described in GH-secreting tumors so far. The response to SA also depends on treatment duration and dosage of the drug used, so that a definition of resistance based on short-term treatments using low doses of long-acting SA is limited. Current data suggest that response to these drugs is better analyzed taking together biochemical and tumoral effects because only the absence of both responses might be considered as a poor response or resistance. This latter evidence seems to occur in 25% of treated patients after 12 months of currently available long-acting SA. (Endocrine Reviews 32: 247-271, 2011)
引用
收藏
页码:247 / 271
页数:25
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