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Acromegaly Support and Outreach


If you or someone you care for has acromegaly, there are several groups that may help. The links below are for your convenience. Please note that Pfizer has no control over or responsibility for these websites. Pfizer does not necessarily endorse any of the following products, services or information.

Acromegaly Community

www.acromegalycommunity.com

This is a support network run by patients for people touched by acromegaly. It offers medical information on issues such as surgery, medication, radiation, and post-diagnosis support. In addition, it provides a network of emotional support for acromegaly patients, as well as their friends and family.

The Hormone Foundation

www.hormone.org

This is the public education affiliate of The Endocrine Society. Its mission is to be a resource for the public by promoting the prevention, treatment, and cure of hormone-related conditions.

Pfizer Inc

www.pfizer.com

Learn more about Pfizer’s commitment to healthcare, including treatment of pituitary-related disorders such as hyperprolactinemia, growth hormone deficiency, and acromegaly, as well as arthritis and hypertension.

Pituitary Disorders Education & Support (PDES)

www.pituitarydisorder.net

This patient organization’s website provides information on pituitary disorders, updates on treatment advances, and links to other pituitary and endocrinology organizations, neuroendocrine clinics, and related websites and message boards.

Pituitary Society

www.pituitarysociety.org

This website presents articles on pituitary diseases, information about International Pituitary Congress programs, the Pituitary Society Newsletter, and tables of contents from back issues of the Society’s journal Pituitary.

Pituitary Network Association

www.pituitary.org

Founded by a group of patients with acromegaly, this is the website of an international nonprofit organization. The PNA is the world’s largest patient advocacy organization for people with pituitary tumors and disorders.

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SOMAVERT (pegvisomant for injection) is a prescription medicine for acromegaly. It is for patients whose disease has not been controlled by surgery, radiation, and/or other medical therapies, or patients for whom these options are not appropriate. The goal of treatment with SOMAVERT is to have a normal IGF-I level in the blood.

Important Safety Information for Patients

Do not use SOMAVERT if you are allergic to SOMAVERT or anything that is in it.

Be sure to tell your doctor if you use narcotic painkillers (opioid medicines) because the dose of SOMAVERT may need to be changed.

Tumors that make growth hormone may grow in people with acromegaly. Studies have shown that the size of these tumors generally does not change for people who use SOMAVERT. Even so, these tumors need to be watched carefully by your doctor. Your doctor may ask you to have a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test to monitor the size of your tumor.

Blood sugar levels may go down when taking SOMAVERT. Be sure to tell your doctor if you use insulin or other medicines (oral hypoglycemic medicines) for diabetes. The dose of these medicines may need to be reduced when you use SOMAVERT.

Some people who have used SOMAVERT have developed liver problems. These problems generally disappeared when those people stopped taking SOMAVERT.

Stop the drug right away and call your doctor if you get any of these symptoms:

  • Your skin or the white part of your eyes turns yellow (jaundice)
  • Your urine turns dark
  • Your bowel movements (stools) turn light in color
  • You do not feel like eating for several days
  • You feel sick to your stomach (nausea)
  • You have unexplained tiredness
  • You have pain in the stomach area (abdomen)

Your doctor may do blood tests before and during your treatment with SOMAVERT to check that the IGF-I levels in your blood are normal and/or that your liver is working correctly. Your dose of SOMAVERT may be changed based on the results of these tests.

If you have stopped SOMAVERT because of an allergic reaction, your doctor will carefully monitor what happens if you start SOMAVERT again.

The most common side effects with SOMAVERT are pain, infection, reaction at the injection site, flu-like symptoms, nausea, and diarrhea. These are not all of the possible side effects of SOMAVERT. For more information, speak to your doctor.

Inject SOMAVERT in a different place on your body each day. This can help prevent skin problems such as lumpiness or soreness.

SOMAVERT has not been studied in pregnant women. It is not known if SOMAVERT passes into the mother’s milk or if it can harm the baby.

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

The health information contained herein is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace discussions with a healthcare provider. All decisions regarding patient care must be made with a healthcare provider, considering the unique characteristics of the patient.

This product information is intended only for residents of the United States and Puerto Rico. The products discussed herein may have different labeling in different countries.



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