Low-dose baclofen therapy raised plasma insulin-like growth factor-1 concentrations, but not into the normal range in a predictable and sustained manner in men with …

WA Bauman, MF La Fountaine… - The Journal of Spinal …, 2013 - Taylor & Francis
WA Bauman, MF La Fountaine, CM Cirnigliaro, SC Kirshblum, AM Spungen
The Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine, 2013Taylor & Francis
Objective To evaluate, whether once-daily oral baclofen administration increases and/or
sustains plasma insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) concentration in 11 men with chronic
spinal cord injury (SCI) and IGF-1 deficiency (ie< 250 ng/ml). Design Prospective, open-
label, dose titration study. Baclofen was administered at 20 mg/day for 8 weeks; then
increased to 40 mg/day for another 8 weeks. Plasma IGF-1 and self-reported side effects
were measured at baseline and every other week for the duration of the study. Results The …
Abstract
Objective
To evaluate, whether once-daily oral baclofen administration increases and/or sustains plasma insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) concentration in 11 men with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) and IGF-1 deficiency (i.e. <250 ng/ml).
Design
Prospective, open-label, dose titration study. Baclofen was administered at 20 mg/day for 8 weeks; then increased to 40 mg/day for another 8 weeks. Plasma IGF-1 and self-reported side effects were measured at baseline and every other week for the duration of the study.
Results
The subjects were 43 ± 12 years old, had duration of injury of 20 ± 12 years; eight subjects had a complete motor injury, and eight had paraplegia. Nine of 11 subjects completed the 20 mg/day treatment and 5 subjects completed the 40 mg/day treatment. Plasma IGF-1 levels improved with each baclofen dose; however, only one subject increased from baseline and remained above the targeted physiological range of 250 ng/ml throughout treatment. A significant increase in IGF-1concentration was observed between baseline and week 2 (154 ± 63 vs. 217 ± 69 ng/ml; P < 0.05), weeks 8 and 10 (188 ± 95 vs. 228 ± 93 ng/ml; P < 0.05), and weeks 8 and 16 (188 ± 95 vs. 259 ± 92 ng/ml; P < 0.05). No serious side effects were observed at 20 mg/day; the 40 mg/day dose was less well tolerated.
Conclusion
Baclofen was not effective at sustaining plasma IGF-1 concentrations in the physiological range in men with chronic SCI.
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