1. Isolated childhood growth hormone deficiency: a 30-year experience on final height and a new prediction model.
- Author
-
Lonero A, Giotta M, Guerrini G, Calcaterra V, Galazzi E, Iughetti L, Cassio A, Wasniewska GM, Mameli C, Tornese G, Salerno M, Cherubini V, Caruso Nicoletti M, Street ME, Grandone A, Giacomozzi C, Faienza MF, Guzzetti C, Bellone S, Parpagnoli M, Musolino G, Maggio MC, Bozzola M, Trerotoli P, and Delvecchio M
- Subjects
- Body Height, Child, Cohort Studies, Growth Hormone therapeutic use, Humans, Puberty, Dwarfism, Pituitary diagnosis, Dwarfism, Pituitary drug therapy, Dwarfism, Pituitary epidemiology, Human Growth Hormone
- Abstract
Purpose: We aimed to evaluate the near-final height (nFHt) in a large cohort of pediatricpatients with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) and to elaborate a new predictive method of nFHt., Methods: We recruited GHD patients diagnosed between 1987 and 2014 and followed-up until nFHt. To predict the values of nFHt, each predictor was run in a univariable spline., Results: We enrolled 1051 patients. Pre-treatment height was -2.43 SDS, lower than parental height (THt) (-1.09 SDS, p < 0.001). The dose of recombinant human GH (rhGH) was 0.21mg/kg/week at start of treatment. nFHt was -1.08 SDS (height gain 1.27 SDS), higher than pre-treatment height (p < 0.001) and comparable to THt. 1.6% of the patients were shorter than -2 SDS from THt. The rhGH dose at nFHt was 0.19 mg/kg/week, lower than at the start (p < 0.001). The polynomial regression showed that nFHt was affected by gender, THt, age at puberty, height at puberty, age at the end of treatment (F = 325.37, p < 0.0001, R
2 87.2%)., Conclusion: This large national study shows that GHD children can reach their THt. The rhGH/kg/day dose significantly decreased from the start to the end of the treatment. Our model suggests the importance of a timely diagnosis, possibly before puberty, the beneficial effect of long-term treatment with rhGH, and the key-role of THt. Our prediction model has a very acceptable error compared to the majority of other published studies., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Italian Society of Endocrinology (SIE).)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF