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Treatment of Cushing Disease With Pituitary-Targeting Seliciclib
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Treatment of Cushing Disease With Pituitary-Targeting Seliciclib

Ning-Ai Liu, Anat Ben-Shlomo, John D Carmichael, Christina Wang, Ronald S Swerdloff, Anthony P Heaney, Garni Barkhoudarian, Daniel Kelly, Mazen Noureddin, Lin Lu, …
The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, Vol.108(3), pp.726-735
03/01/2023
PMID: 36214832

Abstract

Adrenocorticotropic Hormone Adult Humans Hydrocortisone Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion - drug therapy Prospective Studies Roscovitine - therapeutic use
Preclinical studies show seliciclib (R-roscovitine) suppresses neoplastic corticotroph proliferation and pituitary adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) production. To evaluate seliciclib as an effective pituitary-targeting treatment for patients with Cushing disease (CD). Two prospective, open-label, phase 2 trials, conducted at a tertiary referral pituitary center, included adult patients with de novo, persistent, or recurrent CD who received oral seliciclib 400 mg twice daily for 4 consecutive days each week for 4 weeks. The primary endpoint in the proof-of-concept single-center study was normalization of 24-hour urinary free cortisol (UFC; ≤ 50 µg/24 hours) at study end; in the pilot multicenter study, primary endpoint was UFC normalization or ≥ 50% reduction in UFC from baseline to study end. Sixteen patients were consented and 9 were treated. Mean UFC decreased by 42%, from 226.4 ± 140.3 µg/24 hours at baseline to 131.3 ± 114.3 µg/24 hours by study end. Longitudinal model showed significant UFC reductions from baseline to each treatment week. Three patients achieved ≥ 50% UFC reduction (range, 55%-75%), and 2 patients exhibited 48% reduction; none achieved UFC normalization. Plasma ACTH decreased by 19% (P = 0.01) in patients who achieved ≥ 48% UFC reduction. Three patients developed grade ≤ 2 elevated liver enzymes, anemia, and/or elevated creatinine, which resolved with dose interruption/reduction. Two patients developed grade 4 liver-related serious adverse events that resolved within 4 weeks of seliciclib discontinuation. Seliciclib may directly target pituitary corticotrophs in CD and reverse hypercortisolism. Potential liver toxicity of seliciclib resolves with treatment withdrawal. The lowest effective dose requires further determination.

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