AUTHOR=Venegas Moreno Eva , Jiménez-Sánchez Andrés , Remón-Ruiz Pablo , Dios Elena , Perea Cortés Jaime , Hernández-Reina Celia , Cano David A. , Soto Moreno Alfonso TITLE=Cost-effectiveness analysis of second-line medical therapies in acromegaly: a real-life study JOURNAL=Frontiers in Endocrinology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/endocrinology/articles/10.3389/fendo.2025.1573721 DOI=10.3389/fendo.2025.1573721 ISSN=1664-2392 ABSTRACT=IntroductionAcromegaly is an uncommon disease with important comorbidity and economic cost. Although the pharmacological cost of second-line treatment for refractory acromegaly has been theoretically analyzed, real-life studies are needed.ObjectivesTo assess the use of pasireotide and pegvisomant in a third-level center under routine clinical practice.MethodsAcromegaly patients that had been treated with pasireotide and/or pegvisomant were included in (A) a cross-sectional study (two years after starting these drugs) to analyze the cost of acromegaly, hormone replacement, and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) treatments, and the cost of surgery and radiotherapy; and (B) a retrospective cohorts study (May 2006—October 2024) to analyze efficacy, safety (adverse events, fasting glucose, glycated hemoglobin, and T2DM diagnosis), and dose evolution. Descriptive statistics were 10% trimmed means and standard deviation. Two-tailed hypothesis testing with Yuen’s t and Fisher’s test had a P < 0.05 significance.Results25 participants were included in the transversal study and 31 participants in the longitudinal study. A typical patient with a poorly granulated GH-producing adenoma underwent in-center surgery once and received radiotherapy. In the transversal study, total pharmacological cost was 34,139.29 (13,472.09) €/person/year, with 33,874.88 (13,468.36) €/person/year for second-line acromegaly drugs. Pasireotide displayed 9,423.26 €/person/year worth of savings (P = .12), reaching 30,415.98 €/person/year at high dose (P < 0.001). In the longitudinal study, pasireotide dose was reduced (P = .06) regardless of treatment modality. Pasireotide affected carbohydrate metabolism (P = .001), but the effect was generally mild.ConclusionsPasireotide was found to be a more cost-effective option in patients with first-line treatment failure.