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Seach Results for — “acromegaly”

Efficacy and Safety of Lanreotide Autogel® 60, 90 or 120 mg With Lanreotide 40 mg Prolonged Release (PR) in Acromegaly - LANTERN

A Phase III, Prospective, Randomised, Open Label Study to Compare the Efficacy and Safety of Lanreotide Autogel® 60, 90 or 120 mg With Lanreotide 40 mg PR in Subjects With Active Acromegaly

The purpose is to compare the efficacy and safety of lanreotide autogel® 60mg, 90mg or 120mg with lanreotide 40mg PR in subjects with active acromegaly.

NCT02493517 — Acromegaly
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT02493517/

Study to Determine the Maximum Tolerated Dose, Safety and Tolerability of a Single Dose of Lanreotide Prolonged Release Formulation (PRF) in Subjects With Acromegaly

Phase IIa, Open Label, Dose Ascending Study to Determine the Maximum Tolerated Dose, Safety and Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of a Single Dose of Lanreotide PRF in Subjects With Acromegaly Previously Treated and Controlled With Either Octreotide LAR or Lanreotide Autogel

The objectives of the protocol is to determine the maximum tolerated dose and to investigate the pharmacokinetics of a single dose of lanreotide PRF in subjects with acromegaly.

NCT02396953 — Acromegaly
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT02396953/

Phase II Study of Subcutaneous Inj. Depot of Octreotide in Patients With Acromegaly and Neuroendocrine Tumours (NETs)

A Phase II, Open-label, Multicentre, Randomised Study of the Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacodynamics, Efficacy, and Safety of CAM2029 in Patients With Acromegaly and Neuroendocrine Tumours (NETs) Previously Treated With Sandostatin® LAR®

This is a Phase II, open-label multicentre, randomised study to assess the PK, PD, efficacy, and safety of two dosing regimens of CAM2029 in adult patients with acromegaly or a functional, well-differentiated NET, with carcinoid symptoms.

NCT02299089 — Neuroendocrine Tumors
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/neuroendocrine-tumors/NCT02299089/

Growth Hormone, IGF-1 and Medical Treatment in Acromegaly: Are There Effects on Gut Hormone Physiology and Postprandial Substrate Metabolism?

Growth Hormone, IGF-1 and Medical Treatment in Acromegaly: Are There Effects on Gut Hormone Physiology and Postprandial Substrate Metabolism?

Acromegaly is a rare hormonal disorder leading to increased morbidity and mortality. In the vast majority of cases, a pituitary somatotroph cell adenoma causes excess growth hormone (GH) secretion, leading to hepatic insulin-like-growth factor 1 (IGF-1) hypersecretion. Both the disease as well as its treatment with long-acting somatostatin analogs (LA-SMSA) and/or pegvisomant affect glucose and lipid metabolism, possibly contributing to increased cardiovascular risk. In this pilot study, the investigators want to explore insulin sensitivity, postprandial gut hormone response, lipid handling and adipocytokine profile in the following 4 groups: - controlled acromegalic patients on LA-SMSA (group 1) - controlled acromegalic patients on combination treatment of LA-SMSA and pegvisomant (group 2) - acromegalic patients without need for medical therapy after surgery (group 3) - healthy control subjects (group 4) Furthermore, a longitudinal exploration will be performed in uncontrolled acromegalic patients (i.e. patients with serum IGF-1 levels above age-specific thresholds and/or symptoms due to active acromegaly (excessive sweating , arthralgia)) on LA-SMSA monotherapy (group 5). In this group, insulin sensitivity, postprandial gut hormone response, lipid handling and adipocytokine profile will be explored before introducing pegvisomant and three months after normalisation of IGF-1 levels. The investigators hypothesize that lipid and glucose handling will be less efficient in the controlled acromegalic patients on LA-SMSA than in controlled patients on combination therapy or after surgery, and that there will be no difference in substrate metabolism between healthy controls and controlled acromegalic patients on combination treatment or after surgery. Further, they hypothesize that introducing pegvisomant in uncontrolled acromegalic patients will improve their postprandial lipid and glucose handling.

NCT02152124 — Acromegaly
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT02152124/

Predictive Factors Study - TAPAS

Non-interventional, Observational, Long Term Study to Evaluate Common Therapeutic Algorithms and Possible Predictive Parameters for Somatuline Autogel (ATG) Treatment in Patients With Acromegaly.

This is a long term study to evaluate common therapeutic algorithms and possible predictive parameters for Somatuline Autogel treatment in patients with Acromegaly.

NCT02020499 — Acromegaly
Status: Terminated
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT02020499/

Efficacy and Safety of Pasireotide LAR (Long-acting Release) in Japanese Patients With Acromegaly or Pituitary Gigantism

A Multicenter, Open-label, Randomized, Phase II Study to Evaluate Efficacy, Safety, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Pasireotide LAR in Japanese Patients With Active Acromegaly or Pituitary Gigantism

To evaluate efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of pasireotide LAR in Japanese patients with active acromegaly or pituitary gigantism. Primary objective was to assess the total-group efficacy of pasireotide LAR on the reduction of mean GH levels to < 2.5 µg/L and the normalization of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) at 3 months of study treatment.

NCT01673646 — Acromegaly
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT01673646/

Surgical Debulking of Pituitary Adenomas

Does Surgical Debulking Of Pituitary Adenomas Improve Responsiveness To Octreotide LAR In The Treatment Of Acromegaly: An Investigator-Initiated Study

Purpose: The primary objective of this trial will be to determine whether surgery (debulking of pituitary adenomas) improves the response of patients with acromegaly to treatment with Octreotide LAR, when compared to Octreotide LAR therapy alone. Background: The current goal of treatment for people with acromegaly is normalization of both growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like-growth-factor-1 (IGF-1) levels. Normalization of GH and IGF-1 levels attenuates the morbidity (hypertension, cardiovascular disease, sleep apnea, increased cancer risk, arthritis) and increased mortality associated with persistent GH and IGF-1 elevation. The optimal approach to achieving these goals in patients with pituitary macroadenomas remains controversial. Available treatment modalities include transsphenoidal hypophysectomy, medical therapy (somatostatin analogues and/or dopaminergic agonists), radiotherapy, or a combination or these interventions. No randomized trials have been conducted to investigate whether surgical debulking of pituitary macroadenomas enhances the efficacy of medical therapy. This study is designed to rigorously investigate whether surgical debulking increases the efficacy of a long-acting depot somatostatin preparation, Sandostatin LAR, so that evidence-based optimal care may be offered to patients with acromegaly. Study Design: This is a randomized, multicenter trial. A total of 69 patients from 6 or more centers will be enrolled and complete the study. Stratification will be done by a single radiologist at the coordinating center (NYU), and patients with comparable disease will be randomized to Sandostatin LAR treatment administered 1 time per month by IM injection for 3 months before (Arm A) or, for non-cured patients, after (Arm B) surgery. All patients will undergo transsphenoidal hypophysectomy. The impact of surgical debulking on responsiveness to Sandostatin LAR will be evaluated.

NCT01371643 — Pituitary Adenoma
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/pituitary-adenoma/NCT01371643/

Efficacy and Safety of Pasireotide Long Acting Release (LAR) Versus Octreotide LAR or Lanreotide Autogel (ATG) in Patients With Inadequately Controlled Acromegaly - PAOLA

A Phase III, Multicenter, Randomized, Parallel-group Study to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of Double-blind Pasireotide LAR 40 mg and Pasireotide LAR 60 mg Versus Open-label Octreotide LAR or Lanreotide ATG in Patients With Inadequately Controlled Acromegaly

This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of pasireotide LAR 40 and 60 mg versus octreotide LAR or lanreotide ATG in patients with inadequately controlled acromegaly.

NCT01137682 — Acromegaly
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT01137682/

Study to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of Repeated Administration of BIM 23A760 in Patients With Acromegaly - TULIPIA

Phase II, Open, Randomised, Parallel Group, Noncomparative Multicentre Study to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of Repeated Subcutaneous (S.C.) Administration of Different Doses of BIM 23A760 in Acromegalic Patients

The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of repeated subcutaneous (under the skin) injections at different doses of BIM 23A760 on growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-1 levels in patients with acromegaly after 6 months of treatment.

NCT00994214 — Acromegaly
Status: Terminated
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT00994214/

Cardiovascular Outcome After Surgery or Somatostatin Analogues - CVAcro

An Observational, Retrospective, Comparative Study to Investigate Differential Outcome on Cardiomyopathy Following Control of Acromegaly After Surgery or Somatostatin Analogues Given as First-Line Therapy

A direct comparison between the results of surgery or somatostatin analogues (SSA) on cardiovascular complication in acromegaly has never been performed. Our objective is to investigate whether first-line surgery or SSA have a different outcome on cardiomyopathy after 12 months. The design of the study is retrospective, comparative, non randomized, because of ethical problems. Setting University Hospital. All patients treated with SSA [either octreotide-LAR (10-40 mg/q28d), or lanreotide (30-120 mg/q28d); dosages up-titrated to control GH and IGF-I levels] or operated on by transsphenoidal approach. For the purposes of this study only controlled patients will be included. Measurements Primary outcome measures were changes in left ventricular mass index (LVMi), diastolic [early to atrial mitral flow velocity (E/A)] and systolic perform-ance [LV ejection fraction (LVEF)]. Secondary outcome measures were reduction of total/HDL-cholesterol ratio, as a cardiovascular (CV) risk parameter, improvement of glucose profile and pituitary function, as indirect causes of CV improvement. Expected results: SSA and surgery groups should have similar results in terms of improvement of cardiomyopathy. However, recent data suggest that SSA reduce directly heart rate and cardiomyocytes performance: clinical implications of these evidences suggest that SSA will improve cardiovascular outcome more than surgery. Moreover, after surgery, replacement therapy already stabilised or of new onset, has never been considered so far in this setting.

NCT00615004 — Acromegaly
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acromegaly/NCT00615004/