The treatment of acromegalics with somatostatin analogs requires continuous sc infusion using pumps or several sc injections daily. Long-acting formulations (BIM-LA) of BIM 23014 (BIM) using delayed microcapsules may provide a more convenient form of therapy. Fourteen acromegalics whose GH secretion had not been normalized by transphenoidal surgery followed, in 10 cases, by pituitary radiotherapy (performed at least 2 yr before the study) were studied. Eight of these patients participated in an initial study of the pharmacokinetics of BIM-LA, after which a 6-month efficacy study was undertaken. The 8 patients in the pharmacokinetic study had an initial blood sample collected for measurements of plasma GH and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels before the im injection of 30 mg BIM-LA, and blood samples were subsequently taken 2, 4, 6, and 8 h after injection and then twice a week for a month. Plasma IGF-I levels were measured on days 4, 14, 20, and 30 after the injection. Assays of plasma GH, IGF-I, and BIM levels were performed by RIAs. The results showed that plasma GH levels were markedly reduced from 26.0 +/- 2.0 to 2.5 +/- 0.2 micrograms/L 2 h after BIM-LA injection and remained lower than 5 micrograms/mL for the 11 following days. Plasma GH levels increased to 5.5 +/- 1.2 micrograms/L on day 14 and returned to basal values 23 days after injection. Similarly, plasma IGF-I decreased from an initial level of 656 +/- 43 to 324 +/- 23 ng/mL on day 4 and remained close to the normal range for the following 10 days. Plasma BIM levels reached a peak 2 h after the injection (7.2 +/- 2.3 ng/mL) and remained higher than or close to 1 ng/mL until the 14th day after injection. This initial study showed that a single injection of 30 mg BIM-LA effectively suppressed GH and IGF-I secretion for at least 14 days, in accordance with the kinetics of the drug in plasma. Based on the results of this initial study, 30 mg BIM-LA were injected twice monthly for 6 months in all 14 patients. All of the subjects had a basal evaluation before treatment with BIM-LA and were then subjected to assessment of clinical, pituitary, and hormonal parameters. Patients were evaluated after 3 and 6 months of treatment on the same basis as that previously used when starting the BIM-LA therapy. Plasma BIM levels were measured monthly. Clinical signs of acromegaly improved during the treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Small ACTH-secreting carcinoid tumors responsible for Cushing's syndrome are often difficult to localize using available radiological investigations. Somatostatin receptors have been found in about 90% of carcinoid tumors studied, leading to a new approach for the localization of tumors or metastasis by using radiolabeled somatostatin analogs. We report a case of Cushing's syndrome due to an ACTH-secreting bronchial carcinoid tumor, completely suppressible with octreotide treatment and evidenced by body scintigraphy with 111In-labeled pentreotide. After removal, which led to patient recovery, the tumor was studied in vitro. In situ hybridization, using a complementary DNA probe, revealed POMC messenger ribonucleic acid in a subpopulation of tumor cells. These cells were labeled by immunochemistry using an antiserum directed against ACTH. Confocal laser scanning microscopy analysis showed that the ACTH-immunoreactive peptide was sequestered in secretory granules. Autoradiographic labeling using [125I-Tyrzero,D-Trp8]somatostatin-14 demonstrated the presence of somatostatin-binding sites in the whole tumor tissue. The relative affinities of various selective somatostatin analogs and the ability of GTP to inhibit radioligand binding suggested that the receptor expressed in the tumor cells belonged to the SSTR-2 subtype.
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