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* From the Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine (Dr. Weisberg), Fort Lauderdale, FL; Pharmaceutical Research Associates (Mr. Wanger), Lenexa, KS; Bristol-Myers Squibb (Dr. Olson), Princeton, NJ; Medical Pulmonary Associates (Dr. Streit), Tamarac, FL; Spartanburg Pharmaceutical Research (Dr. Fogarty), Spartanburg, SC; Salem Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Dr. Martin), Salem, VA; and Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute (Dr. Casaburi), Torrance, CA.
Correspondence to: Jeffrey Weisberg, DO, 210 Carnegie Center, Princeton, NJ 08540; e-mail: Jeffrey{at}nova.edu
Study objectives: To assess the effect of megestrol acetate (MA), a progestational appetite stimulant commonly used in patients with AIDS and cancer, on body weight and composition, respiratory muscle strength, arterial blood gas levels, and subjective perceptions in COPD patients.
Design and setting: Prospective, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial conducted on an outpatient basis at 18 sites.
Patients: Underweight (< 95% ideal body weight) COPD patients
40 years old.
Interventions: Either MA, 800 mg/d oral suspension, or placebo at a 1:1 ratio for 8 weeks.
Results: Of 145 randomized patients (63% men), 128 patients completed the trial. Body weight increased by 3.2 kg in the MA group and 0.7 kg in the placebo group (p < 0.001). Anthropometric and dual-energy radiograph absorptiometry assessments confirmed that weight gain was mainly fat. Spirometry and maximal voluntary ventilation showed no significant changes from baseline in either group, and the difference in the change in maximum inspiratory pressure between groups was not significant. The 6-min walk distances did not differ statistically between groups at week 2 and week 4, but were greater in the placebo group at week 8 (p = 0.012). Consistent with the known ability of MA to stimulate ventilation, PaCO2 decreased (4.6 mm Hg, p < 0.001) and PaO2 increased (2.8 mm Hg, p < 0.04) in the MA group. Questionnaires revealed that body image and appetite improved in the MA group but not the placebo group. Adverse event frequency and type were similar in both groups, but cortisol and testosterone (in men) levels decreased substantially in the MA group.
Conclusions: We conclude that MA safely increased appetite and body weight, stimulated ventilation, and improved body image in underweight COPD patients, but did not improve respiratory muscle function or exercise tolerance.
Key Words: COPD malnutrition megestrol acetate weight loss
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