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Osilodrostat treatment in patients with Cushing's disease of Asian or non-Asian origin: a pooled analysis of two Phase III randomized trials (LINC 3 and LINC 4)

Authors
 Shimatsu, Akira  ;  Biller, Beverly M. K.  ;  Fleseriu, Maria  ;  Pivonello, Rosario  ;  Lee, Eun Jig  ;  Leelawattana, Rattana  ;  Kim, Jung Hee  ;  Walia, Rama  ;  Yu, Yerong  ;  Liao, Zhihong  ;  Piacentini, Andrea  ;  Pedroncelli, Alberto M.  ;  Snyder, Peter J. 
Citation
 ENDOCRINE JOURNAL, Vol.71(12) : 1103-1123, 2024-12 
Journal Title
ENDOCRINE JOURNAL
ISSN
 0918-8959 
Issue Date
2024-12
Keywords
Cushing&apos ; s syndrome ; Clinical trial ; Efficacy ; Safety ; Race
Abstract
Cushing's disease is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Osilodrostat, a potent oral 11 beta-hydroxylase inhibitor, provided rapid, sustained mean urinary free cortisol (mUFC) normalization in Cushing's disease patients in two Phase III studies (LINC 3, NCT02180217; LINC 4, NCT02697734). Here, we evaluate the efficacy and safety of osilodrostat in Cushing's disease in patients of Asian origin compared with patients of non-Asian origin. Pooled data from LINC 3 and LINC 4 were analyzed. Outcomes were evaluated separately for Asian and non-Asian patients. For the analysis, 210 patients were included; 56 (27%) were of Asian origin. Median (minimum-maximum) osilodrostat dose was 3.8 (1-25) and 7.3 (1-47) mg/day in Asian and non-Asian patients, respectively. mUFC control was achieved at weeks 48 and 72 in 64.3% and 68.1% of Asian and 68.2% and 75.8% of non-Asian patients. Improvements in cardiovascular and metabolic-related parameters, physical manifestations of hypercortisolism, and quality of life were similar in both groups. Most common adverse events (AEs) were adrenal insufficiency (44.6%) in Asian and nausea (45.5%) in non-Asian patients. AEs related to hypocortisolism and pituitary tumor enlargement occurred in more Asian (58.9% and 21.4%) than non-Asian patients (40.3% and 9.1%). Of Asian and non-Asian patients, 23.2% and 13.6%, respectively, discontinued because of AEs. Asian patients with Cushing's disease generally required numerically lower osilodrostat doses than non-Asian patients to achieve beneficial effects. Hypocortisolism-related AEs were reported in more Asian than non-Asian patients. Together, these findings suggest that Asian patients are more sensitive to osilodrostat than non-Asian patients.
DOI
10.1507/endocrj.EJ24-0153
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Lee, Eun Jig(이은직) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9876-8370
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/202475
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