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Case Reports
. 2004 Mar-Apr;10(2):107-11.
doi: 10.4158/EP.10.2.107.

Dependency and analgesia related to treatment with subcutaneous octreotide in patients with growth hormone-secreting tumors

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Case Reports

Dependency and analgesia related to treatment with subcutaneous octreotide in patients with growth hormone-secreting tumors

Ines Donangelo et al. Endocr Pract. 2004 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

Objective: To describe three patients diagnosed with somatotropinomas in whom the analgesic effect of octreotide was observed, along with dependency to the drug.

Methods: These patients had pituitary macroadenomas treated with transphenoidal surgery and pituitary radiotherapy, and received high daily doses (>900 microg/day) of subcutaneous octreotide because of persistent high levels of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I).

Results: Headache occurred prior to drug administration in all three cases, with relief soon after. We also observed tolerance to octreotide's analgesic and anti-secretory actions (one patient), craving for the drug (two patients), withdrawal syndrome (one patient), and drug abuse (one patient).

Conclusion: Dependency syndrome may occur when high doses of octreotide are used, sometimes leading to drug abuse. Tolerance to the growth hormone anti-secretory effect of the drug may encourage physicians to increase doses to levels at which drug dependency has been observed. Sustained release somatostatin analogs may represent a solution to this problem.

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