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Multicenter Evaluation of the Effect of Upfront Radiosurgery on Residual Growth Hormone-secreting Pituitary Adenoma

Multicenter Evaluation of the Effect of Upfront Radiosurgery on Residual Growth Hormone-secreting Pituitary Adenoma From an Endocrinological Point of View (MERGE Study): a Randomized, Phase 3 Trial

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03439709
Acronym
MERGE
Enrollment
90
Registered
2018-02-20
Start date
2018-03-01
Completion date
2022-12-31
Last updated
2018-03-01

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

Conditions

Acromegaly Due to Pituitary Adenoma

Keywords

acromegaly, pituitary adenoma, gamma knife radiosurgery, adjuvant treatment

Brief summary

In this study, the investigators hypothesize that upfront gamma knife radiosurgery with drug therapy is superior in the treatment of growth hormone-secreting pituitary tumors after primary surgical treatment compared with the drug therapy alone. This study can provide useful clinical information in the treatment of patients with acromegaly.

Detailed description

Acromegaly is often caused by growth hormone (GH)-secreting pituitary adenoma and causes anatomic changes in the body and various metabolic disorders caused by increased GH and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF1). Surgical treatment of pituitary tumors is the preferred standard of care, but only 40-70% of patients can be treated with surgical treatment alone. In many cases, complete resection of the tumor is not possible and the hormone imbalance persists after surgery. After surgical treatment, several additional treatments are needed to prevent hypersecretion of GH and to normalize blood levels of IGF-1. As first-line treatment after surgical resection, there are typically drug therapy and radiation therapy. The most common used drugs are octreotide and lanreotide, which are growth hormone analogues. However, according to the recent guideline, the endocrine remission rate obtained from post-operative drug therapy is only 17-35%. Although clinical trials are underway for new drugs, the burden of expensive drug costs, recurrence during drug withdrawal, and drug side effects remains major drawbacks. There is a need for therapeutic intervention to reduce the dose and duration of therapy, to prevent tumor recurrence, and to achieve rapid endocrinologic remission. Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), such as gamma knife radiosurgery, has been actively introduced worldwide to control residual pituitary tumors and has been applied to more than 200 cases of intractable acromegaly. The effect of SRS on endocrine remission in patients who did not receive endocrine therapy was confirmed in the literature. In a study of 136 patients who underwent preoperative radiotherapy followed by more than 5 years of follow-up, 65.4% of patients reported endocrine remission. According to the recently published meta-analysis, SRS showed 93-100% tumor growth control and size reduction within 5 to 10 years after surgery. The endocrinologic remission rate was reported to be 40-60% at 5 years. To date, SRS has been recommended for the treatment of growth hormone - secreting pituitary tumors in cases where surgical removal is not feasible from the beginning or if drug treatment fails after surgical removal. Only the retrospective study of SRS was performed and no prospective study was conducted at all. However, many institutions already prefer preemptive SRS treatment for residual tumor after surgery and have been practiced in many patients. Therefore, prospective clinical trials are needed to establish the basis for upfront SRS and establish the treatment strategy for patients who do not have endocrine remission after surgical treatment of GH secretory pituitary tumor.

Interventions

Minimum 25 Gy of marginal dose is applied for residual tumor or resection cavity. Depending on the size of tumor, the dose can be varied.

DRUGLanreotide 60Mg Solution for Injection

Lanreotide injection.

Sponsors

Samsung Medical Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Masking description

Technically, the procedure of gamma knife radiosurgery includes fixating stereotactic frame on the head of patients. Therefore, It is not possible to keep masking for participants and other investigators.

Intervention model description

The patients with acromegaly due to growth hormone secreting pituitary adenoma who receive primary surgical resection and fail to achieve endocrinologic remission at 3 months after surgical resection are enrolled. They are devided into two groups; One consists of patients underwent upfront stereotactic radiosurgery combinated with standard drug therapy, and another group consists of patients receiving only standard drug therapy.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Among patients with acromegaly due to growth hormone secreting pituitary adenoma who underwent primary surgical resection, patients who fail to achieve endocrinologic remission at 3 months after surgery. * On brain MRI scan at 3months after surgery, residual tumor is confirmed by clinicians * the definition of endocrinologic remission 1. random growth hormone level \< 2.5 ug/L 2. normalization of age-matched insulin growth factor-1 level

Exclusion criteria

* patients with contraindication of stereotactic radiosurgery; e.g. pregnancy or planning pregnancy, or claustrophobia * recurrent pituitary adenoma * limited life expectancy due to systemic disease; e.g. malignant tumor, genetic disease, and terminal stage of renal or hepatic failure * disability to clinic visit due to postoperative complications

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
endocrinologic remissionat 2 year after initial enrollmentAchieving random growth hormone level below 2.5 ug/L and normalization of insulin-growth factor-1 level

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
tumor size1 year intervalmaximum diameter of tumor
drug requirement dosageat 3 months after initial enrollment and 6 months thereafter for 2 yearsdaily total dose requirement (multiplied dose per injection by number of injections)
side effectat 3 months after initial enrollment and 6 months thereafter for 2 yearsradiation induced and drug related side effects
performance statusat 3 months after initial enrollment and 6 months thereafter for 2 yearsmodified Rankin scale; lower values represent a better outcome as followings: 0 - No symptoms. 1. \- No significant disability. Able to carry out all usual activities, despite some symptoms. 2. \- Slight disability. Able to look after own affairs without assistance, but unable to carry out all previous activities. 3. \- Moderate disability. Requires some help, but able to walk unassisted. 4. \- Moderately severe disability. Unable to attend to own bodily needs without assistance, and unable to walk unassisted. 5. \- Severe disability. Requires constant nursing care and attention, bedridden, incontinent. 6. \- Dead.

Countries

South Korea

Contacts

Primary ContactDoo-Sik Kong, MD,Ph.D
doosik.kong@samsung.com+82-2-3410-0732

Outcome results

None listed

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