Macimorelin (AEZS-130)-stimulated growth hormone (GH) test: validation of a novel oral stimulation test for the diagnosis of adult GH deficiency. | Pepdox
Macimorelin (AEZS-130)-stimulated growth hormone (GH) test: validation of a novel oral stimulation test for the diagnosis of adult GH deficiency.
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism2013PMID: 23559086
Macimorelin, a new oral drug that mimics ghrelin to stimulate growth hormone release, was tested as a diagnostic tool for adult growth hormone deficiency. The drug proved safe and effective, correctly identifying growth hormone deficiency with 82% sensitivity and 92% specificity, performing comparably to the standard injectable test. This oral test offers a more convenient alternative to existing methods that require intravenous administration.
Abstract
CONTEXT: In the absence of panhypopituitarism and low serum IGF-I levels, the diagnosis of adult GH deficiency (AGHD) requires confirmation with a GH stimulation test. Macimorelin is a novel, orally active ghrelin mimetic that stimulates GH secretion.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study was to determine the diagnostic efficacy and safety of macimorelin in AGHD.
DESIGN: This was a multicenter open-label study comparing the diagnostic accuracy of oral macimorelin with that of arginine+GHRH in AGHD patients and healthy, matched controls. After 43 AGHD patients and 10 controls were tested, the GHRH analog Geref Diagnostic [GHRH(1-29)NH2] became unavailable in the United States. The study was completed by testing 10 additional AGHD patients and 38 controls with macimorelin alone.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Peak GH area under the receiver operating characteristic curve after macimorelin was measured.
RESULTS: Fifty AGHD subjects and 48 controls were evaluated. Peak GH levels in AGHD patients and controls after macimorelin were 2.36 ± 5.69 and 17.71 ± 19.11 ng/mL, respectively (P < .0001). With macimorelin, the receiver operating characteristic analysis yielded an optimal GH cut point of 2.7 ng/mL, with 82% sensitivity, 92% specificity, and 13% misclassification rate. For subjects receiving both tests, macimorelin showed discrimination comparable with arginine+GHRH (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.99 vs 0.94, respectively, P = .29). Obesity (body mass index > 30 kg/m(2)) was present in 58% of subjects, and peak GH levels were inversely associated with body mass index in controls (r = -0.37, P = .01). Using the separate cut points of 6.8 ng/mL for nonobese and 2.7 for obese subjects reduced the misclassification rate to 11%. Only 1 drug-related serious adverse event, an asymptomatic QT interval prolongation on the electrocardiogram, was reported.
CONCLUSION: Oral macimorelin is safe, convenient, and effective in diagnosing AGHD with accuracy comparable with the arginine+GHRH test.
Authors
Garcia, J M; Swerdloff, R; Wang, C; Kyle, M; Kipnes, M; Biller, B M K; Cook, D; Yuen, K C J; Bonert, V; Dobs, A; Molitch, M E; Merriam, G R