Litcius/Paper detail

An open-label extension of a phase 2 dose-finding study of once-weekly somatrogon vs. once-daily Genotropin in children with short stature due to growth hormone deficiency: results following 5 years of treatment

Zvi Zadik, Nataliya Zelinska, Violeta Iotova, Yulia Skorodok, Oleg Malievsky, Nelly Mauras, Srinivas Rao Valluri, Aleksandra Pastrak, Ron G. Rosenfeld

2023Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: ) was initiated, after which participants could enroll into an open-label extension (OLE) evaluating the safety and efficacy of long-term somatrogon treatment. METHODS: There were five study periods, Periods I and II were 6 months each while Periods III, IV, and V were 12 months each. In the main study (Periods I and II), 53 prepubertal children with GHD were randomized to once-weekly somatrogon (0.25, 0.48, or 0.66 mg/kg/week) or once-daily Genotropin (0.034 mg/kg/day); 48 continued into the OLE, consisting of Period III (original somatrogon dose; Genotropin recipients randomized to one of three somatrogon doses), Period IV (somatrogon 0.66 mg/kg/week), and Period V (prefilled somatrogon pen [0.66 mg/kg/week]). RESULTS: At the end of Period III, the mean ± SD annual height velocity (HV) for 0.25, 0.48, and 0.66 mg/kg/week somatrogon groups was 7.73 ± 1.89, 7.54 ± 1.28, and 8.81 ± 1.12 cm/year, respectively; HV was sustained during Periods IV/V. Height SD scores (SDS) showed progressive improvement throughout the OLE, regardless of initial cohort assignment, approaching the normal range (-0.69 ± SD 0.87) at the end of Period V Year 1. Mild or moderate treatment-emergent adverse events were reported in 81.3% of participants, most unrelated to study drug. CONCLUSIONS: Up to 5 years of once-weekly somatrogon was well tolerated and resulted in sustained improvement in height SDS and delta height SDS in prepubertal short children with GHD.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAdverse effectShort statureGrowth hormone deficiencyRandomized controlled trialInternal medicinePediatricsGrowth hormoneAnimal scienceHormoneBiologyGrowth Hormone and Insulin-like Growth FactorsHypothalamic control of reproductive hormonesOvarian function and disorders