Clinical endocrinology
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Clinical endocrinology · Oct 2007
Multicenter StudyEfficacy of a slow-release formulation of lanreotide (Autogel) 120 mg) in patients with acromegaly previously treated with octreotide long acting release (LAR): an open, multicentre longitudinal study.
Lanreotide Autogel 120 mg (ATG120; Ipsen S.p.A, Milan, Italy) is a high-dose, sustained-release aqueous gel formulation, supplied in a prefilled syringe and given by deep subcutaneous injection. The aim of this study was to compare efficacy and tolerability of ATG120 given every 4-8 weeks with those of octreotide LAR (o-LAR) given every 4 weeks. DESIGN PATIENTS AND INTERVENTION: A phase III multicentre Italian open clinical study of 23 acromegalic patients (15 female, 8 male). All patients had received o-LAR for 6-18 months and, after 3 months wash out, ATG120 was given every 6 weeks for a total of four injections (Period 1). Then the interval between ATG120 injections was adjusted according to three different schemes: every 4, 6 or 8 weeks depending on GH levels (GH > 2.5 microg/l; 1 < GH
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Clinical endocrinology · Oct 2007
Multicenter StudyMutations in GCK and HNF-1alpha explain the majority of cases with clinical diagnosis of MODY in Spain.
The aim of this study was to group patients with MODY (maturity-onset diabetes of the young) according to the genetic alterations underlying the disease and to investigate their clinical characteristics. ⋯ Almost 90% of the MODY cases in the group studied are explained by mutations in the major genes GCK (MODY2) and HNF-1alpha(MODY3), although differences in the relative prevalence of each form could be partly due to patient referral bias (paediatric vs. adult). In general, patients with MODY2 were diagnosed at an earlier age in life than MODY3 patients and had a milder form of diabetes. Moreover, the majority of patients with MODY2 mutations were treated with diet whereas half of MODY3 patients received pharmacological treatment.