A prospective randomized study was performed in patients with hyperthyroid Graves' disease (GD) in order to compare long (18 months) and short term (6 months) antithyroid drug treatment on the remission rate. A therapeutic protocol was offered to all GD patients who had not been treated for this disease previously. All patients studied who followed the protocol were rechecked 2 yr after treatment was withdrawn, or earlier in the case of relapse. Of the patients having undergone long term treatment, 61.8% still were in remission 2 yr after treatment withdrawal, whereas only 41.7% of the patients treated for 6 months were in remission (P less than 0.05). Such findings clearly establish that treatment duration has a direct beneficial incidence on the remission rate. These results were confirmed by the fact that treatment for 18 months resulted in remission in 7 of 15 patients who had previously relapsed after a 6-month course of therapy. This improvement in relation to treatment duration might be due to the immunosuppressive action of carbimazole. No significant difference was observed between relapse and remission groups, regardless of treatment duration, for HLA ABDr, serum T3 and T4, and T3/T4 ratio determined before treatment. Only the thyroid-stimulating antibody levels determined at the time of diagnosis and at the end of treatment were higher in the relapse group, a difference that was relevant only globally, due to value scattering. Furthermore, thyroid-stimulating antibody levels at the end of treatment may indicate remission or, conversely, continuance of the pathological process.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Treatment duration greater than 18 months did not improve remission rate determined 2 years after treatment withdrawal or immunological variables or early iodine uptake measured at the time of discontinuation of treatment. These findings would indicate that, when a defined duration treatment is planned, prolonging treatment beyond 18 months does not provide any additional benefit.
Octreotide LAR 20 mg administered once monthly was more effective than lanreotide SR 30 mg administered 2 or 3 times monthly in reducing GH and IGF-I in patients with acromegaly.
In 1976 we initiated a prospective study to specify the usefulness of thyroid stimulating antibody (TSAb) determinations in predicting the outcome of post-antithyroid drug treatment for Graves' disease. This study was carried out on 55 patients, who were either treated for six (n = 16) or 18 months (n = 39) and followed up for an additional two-year period. TSAb was determined on whole serum in 29 patients before and at the end of treatment, and in 26 patients at the end of treatment only. These determinations were carried out using a sensitive and reproducible microassay based on cAMP accumulation in human thyroid cell cultures. Before treatment, TSAb ranging from 170 to 1529% was present in 28/29 patients and reached significantly low levels at the end of treatment whatever its duration. TSAb was undetectable in 24/55 patients at the end of treatment. 8/16 'short-treated' and 18/39 'long-treated' patients remained in remission. As expected, initial TSAb levels had no predictive value. End-treatment TSAb values, when low (less than 350%) or negative did not correlate with later evolution: in these 39 patients, relapse rate was 41%. In contrast, 13/16 patients with end-treatment TSAb greater than 350% relapsed. Relapses tended to occur earlier in patients with the highest TSAb levels. TSAb determined again during follow-up was negative in each of the 18 patients in remission, and positive in 8/10 patients at the time of relapse, whatever its level at the end of the drug course. This study confirms that only end-treatment TSAb levels are predictive of relapse.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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