The purpose of this study is to test the effect of long-acting somatostatin analog medications, taken by patients with acromegaly or carcinoid syndrome, on growth hormone in comparison to healthy controls who are not receiving the medication in order to see whether or not the medication makes the oral glucose test less accurate. The Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT) is a standard test to measure growth hormone secretion. By comparing GH responses in non-acromegaly subjects taking somatostatin analog treatment, the relative contribution of the medication and the underlying disease state can be analyzed.
Subjects will be informed of the study and after providing written informed consent, subjects will be asked to undergo a 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test (ingestion of 75g glucose with subsequent timed assessment of growth hormone, glucose, insulin and related binding proteins.) Baseline assessment of hormones that may contribute to the results will be drawn, prior to performing the test. Patients will be asked to complete one visit total to participate in this trial.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
An OGTT is a test that lowers growth hormone in the body to very low levels for a short time in order to see how low the growth hormone levels are in your blood.
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Pituitary Center
Los Angeles, California, United States
Growth hormone response to OGTT
assessment of the validity of GH suppression during somatostatin analog treatment in acromegaly and non-acromegaly subjects
Time frame: 2 hours
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