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Review
. 2003 Apr;20(3):271-8.
doi: 10.1385/ENDO:20:3:271.

Somatostatin analogs in medical treatment of acromegaly

Affiliations
Review

Somatostatin analogs in medical treatment of acromegaly

Michael S Racine et al. Endocrine. 2003 Apr.

Abstract

Although acromegaly remains a disease primarily addressed by pituitary microsurgery, most patients require secondary treatment for persistent growth hormone (GH) hypersecretion and elevated serum insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) concentrations following adenomectomy. Persistently abnormal serum GH and IGF-1 can be reduced to normal concentrations in better than half of post-surgery acromegalics using the pharmacologic treatments available at present, the dopamine agonists (DA) and somatostatin (SST) analogs. The long-acting SST analogs octreotide LAR and lanreotide SR have become the mainstay of medical treatment for acromegaly, having largely supplanted DA agents since the introduction of bromocriptine for the suppression of GH secretion in the 1970s. The DA cabergoline may be effective in up to half of patients, however, in particular those patients whose tumors cosecrete prolactin. On the horizon is the GH-receptor antagonist pegvisomant, which is expected to enable the reduction of serum IGF-1 to the normal range in the vast majority of postoperative acromegaly patients, representing a revolutionary development in the medical treatment of this disease. We here review the choices available to the endocrinologist in the pharmacologic treatment of acromegaly, focusing upon the SST analogs.

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