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Rosiglitazone in Treating Patients With Pituitary Tumors

Rosiglitazone (Peroxisome Proliferating Activating Receptor-gamma {PPAR-y} Ligand) Treatment of Pituitary Tumors

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00616642
Enrollment
1
Registered
2008-02-15
Start date
2006-10-31
Completion date
2010-11-30
Last updated
2020-08-14

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Brain and Central Nervous System Tumors

Keywords

recurrent pituitary tumor, ACTH-producing pituitary tumor, nonfunctioning pituitary tumor

Brief summary

RATIONALE: Rosiglitazone may help pituitary adenoma cells become more like normal cells, and grow and spread more slowly. PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying how well rosiglitazone works in treating patients with newly diagnosed or residual or recurrent pituitary adenoma.

Detailed description

OBJECTIVES: * To assess the effect of rosiglitazone maleate on the core biochemical parameter, 24-hour urinary free cortisol levels, in patients with recurrent or uncured pituitary-dependent Cushing disease. (Group 1) * To assess the effect of this drug on corticotropin-releasing hormone-stimulated pituitary tumor ACTH secretion in patients with recurrent or uncured pituitary-dependent Cushing disease. (Group 1) * To assess the effect of this drug on tumor growth in patients with non-secreting pituitary macroadenoma (\> 10 mm) using RECIST criteria. (Group 2) * To assess the effect of this drug on pituitary tumor gonadotropin (i.e., follicle-stimulating hormone, leuteinizing hormone, and alpha-subunit) secretion in patients with non-secreting macroadenoma. (Group 2) * To assess the overall safety and tolerability of this drug in both cohorts of patients. * To assess the overall quality of life, in terms of performance status during treatment, of both cohorts of patients using the Karnofsky performance index. OUTLINE: Patients are grouped according to adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-secreting status (yes \[Group 1\] vs no \[Group 2\]). * Group 1 (ACTH-secreting adenomas): Patients receive 4 mg oral rosiglitazone maleate once daily in week 1 and then 8 mg once daily beginning in week 2 and continuing for up to 6 months in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. * Group 2 (non-secreting macroadenomas): Patients receive 4 mg oral rosiglitazone maleate once daily in week 1 and then 8 mg once daily beginning in week 2 and continuing for up to 12 months in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Patients undergo collection of blood and urine samples at baseline and after completion of study therapy to assess pituitary function, thyroid function, and 24-hour urinary free cortisol levels. Additional assessments include corticotrophin-stimulation testing, dynamic pituitary function testing (i.e., arginine/growth-hormone releasing-hormone testing) to measure growth hormone secretion, and overnight 1 mg dexamethasone suppression testing to measure 8 a.m. serum cortisol levels. Patients also undergo MRI at baseline and after completion of study therapy to examine the effects of rosiglitazone maleate treatment on pituitary tumor size. Patients complete a questionnaire at baseline and monthly during study for evaluation of headaches. PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 15 patients with ACTH-secreting pituitary tumor and 15 patients with non-secreting pituitary macroadenomas will be accrued for this study.

Interventions

Given orally

Sponsors

National Institutes of Health (NIH)
CollaboratorNIH
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Clinically demonstrable pituitary tumor, including either of the following subtypes: * ACTH-secreting adenoma * Residual or recurrent disease ≥ 1 month after prior pituitary surgery * Clinically demonstrable tumor, as evidenced by both of the following: * Elevated 24-hour urinary free cortisol (UFC) level * Lack of suppression of 8 a.m. serum cortisol to \< 1.8 µg/dL after administration of dexamethasone 1 mg at 11 p.m. the previous night * Tumor demonstrated by MRI performed with and without contrast and/or by inferior petrosal sinus sampling with evidence of a central ACTH source. * Normal visual field evaluation by Goldman perimetry * Hypopituitarism allowed as evidenced by any or all of the following: * Subnormal growth hormone (GH) response to arginine/GH-releasing hormone testing (normal response is an increase of 2-6 ng/me) * Low age and sex-matched IGF-1 levels * Low thyroid-stimulating hormone, free triiodothyronine, and free thyroxine levels * Low estradiol levels * Low leuteinizing hormone (LH) and low follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels in post-menopausal female patients OR low testosterone, LH, and FSH levels in male patients * Patients with Cushing disease (i.e., harboring ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas) must meet the following criteria: * Hypercortisolemic (i.e., uncured) despite ≥ 1 pituitary surgery * Refuse to undergo pituitary irradiation and/or bilateral adrenalectomy * Refuse alternate steroid-lowering therapy such as ketoconazole and/or metyrapone. * Negative pregnancy test * Fertile patients must use effective contraception for at least 2 months prior to, during, and for 1 month after completion of study therapy. * Non-secreting pituitary adenoma * Newly diagnosed disease or residual tumor after prior surgical debulking * Patients underwent prior surgical debulking must be ≥ 3 months post-surgery * More than 10 mm in widest diameter (i.e., macroadenoma), as demonstrated by pituitary MRI performed with and without gadolinium * Must be able to undergo pituitary MRI (group 2) * More than 2 months since prior blood donation \> 400 mL * More than 1 month since prior unlicensed drugs or participation in a clinical trial using an investigational drug * More than 3 months since prior rosiglitazone maleate or other thiazolidinedione * Patients diagnosed with hypopituitarism (except post-menopausal females) are required to initiate hormone-replacement therapy (HRT) for the 6-month duration of the study and to discontinue HRT at the end of 6 months to re-evaluate hypopituitarism

Exclusion criteria

* Acromegaly as demonstrated by normal serum insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) level * Cushing disease as demonstrated by normal 24-hour UFC cortisol level * Prolactinoma as demonstrated by normal to moderately elevated prolactin levels (moderate elevations in serum prolactin \[\< 200 ng/mL\] can occur in non-secreting tumors due to pituitary stalk displacement) * clinically significant renal, hematologic, cardiac, or hepatic abnormalities within the past month * other active malignancy within the past five years except basal cell carcinoma or carcinoma in situ of the cervix * evidence of drug or alcohol abuse * prior or current medical condition that may interfere with the conduct of the study or evaluation of its results, in the opinion of the Investigator or the Data Safety Monitoring Board compliance officer * postmenopausal female receiving HRT * pregnant or nursing * history of immunocompromise, including known HIV positivity as measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and western blot * active or suspected acute or chronic uncontrolled infection * history of noncompliance to medical regimens, potentially unreliability, or inability to complete the study * prior or concurrent radiotherapy for pituitary tumor * concurrent pituitary surgery

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Efficacy of Rosiglitazone Maleate on Cushing Disease12 monthsReduction in pituitary tumor volume by over 50% as assessed by MRI to measurements made at baseline.

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Recruitment details

2006 - May 2009

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Group 1 (ACTH-secreting Adenomas)
Patients receive 4 mg oral rosiglitazone maleate once daily in week 1 and then 8 mg once daily beginning in week 2 and continuing for up to 6 months in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. rosiglitazone maleate : Given orally
0
Group 2 (Non-secreting Macroadenomas)
Patients receive 4 mg oral rosiglitazone maleate once daily in week 1 and then 8 mg once daily beginning in week 2 and continuing for up to 12 months in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. rosiglitazone maleate : Given orally
1
Total1

Withdrawals & dropouts

PeriodReasonFG000FG001
Overall StudyWithdrawal by Subject01

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicGroup 2 (Non-secreting Macroadenomas)Total
Age, Categorical
<=18 years
0 Participants0 Participants
Age, Categorical
>=65 years
0 Participants0 Participants
Age, Categorical
Between 18 and 65 years
1 Participants1 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
American Indian or Alaska Native
0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Asian
0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Black or African American
0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
More than one race
0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
White
1 Participants1 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
1 Participants1 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
0 Participants0 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
— / —— / —
other
Total, other adverse events
0 / 00 / 1
serious
Total, serious adverse events
0 / 00 / 1

Outcome results

Primary

Efficacy of Rosiglitazone Maleate on Cushing Disease

Reduction in pituitary tumor volume by over 50% as assessed by MRI to measurements made at baseline.

Time frame: 12 months

Population: No data was analyzed for this outcome measure as there was insufficient data to perform analysis.

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026