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Management of Osilodrostat Therapy in Patients With Cushing's Syndrome: A Modified Delphi Consensus Panel. J Endocr Soc 2025 Aug;9(8):bvaf103

Date

07/07/2025

Pubmed ID

40620482

Pubmed Central ID

PMC12227144

DOI

10.1210/jendso/bvaf103

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-105024539713 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   2 Citations

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Endogenous Cushing's syndrome (CS) is a rare endocrine disorder that chronically exposes patients to supraphysiological cortisol levels. Primary therapy for CS consists of surgery. Medical therapies are also considered for many patients with CS, including those who are not surgical candidates or have persistent or recurrent hypercortisolism after surgery. Osilodrostat, an adrenal steroidogenesis inhibitor, demonstrated sustained efficacy and safety in phase 3 clinical trials and is currently approved to treat endogenous CS in Europe and the United States. Because of limited clinical experience, questions remain about how to individualize osilodrostat treatment for different clinical scenarios and special populations. Additional guidance from experts based on clinical study and real-world experiences with osilodrostat is needed.

METHODS: A modified Delphi consensus panel study was conducted consisting of 13 specialists from high-volume endocrinology centers with experience prescribing osilodrostat. Advisors participated in 3 consensus rounds (2 anonymous surveys, 1 virtual workshop) over approximately 10 months to provide guidance and recommendations on optimal osilodrostat use.

RESULTS: Over 2 surveys and a 2-hour virtual workshop, 26 statements related to osilodrostat achieved consensus among Delphi panelists and 5 were excluded. Topics included patient preparation before osilodrostat initiation, baseline testing, dosing at onset and during treatment, managing dose adjustments, monitoring during dose titration, and treatment alterations for planned and unexpected clinical events.

CONCLUSION: Treatment guidance and recommendations for osilodrostat use were obtained using the Delphi method. These statements are intended to provide physicians with education and guidance on using osilodrostat to optimally treat patients with CS.

Author List

Samson SL, Donegan D, Geer EB, Gordon MB, Hamidi O, Huang W, Ioachimescu AG, Silverstein JM, Spencer-Segal JL, Tritos NA, Yuen KCJ

Author

Adriana G. Ioachimescu MD, PhD Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin