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Megestrol acetate in pediatric oncology patients may lead to severe, symptomatic adrenal suppression

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Version 1 2015-03-17, 12:01
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:07 authored by LM Orme, JD Bond, MS Humphrey, MR Zacharin, PA Downie, KM Jamsen, SL Mitchell, JM Robinson, NA Grapsas, DM Ashley
BACKGROUND: Despite the widespread use of megestrol acetate (MA) among a growing number of pediatric oncology departments, there is only one published study on the use of MA in children with malignant disease. The objectives of the current study were to examine the effect of MA in improving the nutritional status of children with malignant disease and to describe and consider the implications of MA-associated adrenal suppression that was found consistently. METHODS: Medical records of 19 children with malignant disease who were treated with MA were reviewed. During MA therapy, clinical assessments every 4 weeks included anthropometrics, caloric intake, quality-of-life scores, and appetite scores. Serum cortisol levels, lipid profiles (including cholesterol levels) random blood glucose levels, and coagulation screening were measured at 4-6-week intervals. RESULTS: MA use was associated with significant increases in weight, weight z score, middle-upper arm circumference, triceps skin-fold thickness, appetite, and caloric intake. MA was extremely useful in aiding the efficient tapering of nasogastric feeds. However, a significant and potentially dangerous decrease in cortisol was seen in 10 of 11 patients tested, with 1 patient who manifested clinical hypoadrenalism with hemodynamic collapse, requiring inotropic support. This is the first report of MA-associated clinical adrenal suppression in a child with malignant disease. CONCLUSIONS: Although the results of this study support the ability of MA to improve nutritional status, its use was complicated by severe adrenal suppression in almost all patients tested, with a serious clinical adverse event occurring in one patient. Routine hydrocortisone supplementation throughout MA treatment should be considered as well as larger doses for patients with acute illness and patients who undergo surgery.

History

Journal

Cancer

Volume

98

Pagination

397-405

Location

Chichester, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0008-543X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2003, American Cancer Society

Issue

2

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons