pubmed-article:12841543 | pubmed:abstractText | In some acromegalic patients medical treatment does not succeed in normalizing GH/IGF-I values. Data showing IGF-I suppression in acromegaly by estrogen and by tamoxifen use prompted us to reevaluate the effects of estroprogestins (EP) supplementation on GH/IGF-I levels in acromegalic women resistant or only partially sensitive to medical treatment. Eight active acromegalic women (30-52 yr, 4 with regular menses) entered a prospective open pilot study. Three of them, resistant to medical treatment, were off therapy; the remaining five, partially sensitive, maintained it at the maximally effective dosages throughout the study. Patients were treated with a triphasic pill (ethynil-estradiol 30-40-30 microg/day and desogestrel 50-70-100 mg/day) for 13 +/- 7 months. IGF-I levels fell from 512 (median, interquartile 436-657) microg/l to 282 (244-526) microg/l (p=0.0414); the decrease was observed in 6 patients (75%), and normal values were reached in 4 (50%). GH levels did not change [basal 7.6 (6.2-8.6) microg/l, final 7.6 (6.5-8.3) microg/l]. Effectiveness of treatment was not dependent on concomitant anti-GH treatment or gonadal status. In all patients IGF-I levels re-increased after EP withdrawal. This pilot study shows a marked IGF-I lowering effect of pill in acromegalic women, and warrants a prospective randomized study in patients resistant or partially sensitive to other medical treatments. | lld:pubmed |