We studied 30 girls (age 6.36 +/- 1.21 years, range 4.6-8.8) affected by idiopathic precocious puberty with significant reduction of height velocity (below the 25th centile) at the end of 1 year of Gn-RHa (triptorelin intramuscular depot) treatment, to evaluate GH-IGF-I axis activity and the effects of combined Gn-RHa plus hGH therapy. After 12 months, 15 patients continued Gn-RHa and started hGH therapy for 12 months, while 15 continued treatment with Gn-RHa alone (control group). We evaluated height velocity, bone age, urinary GH, serum IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels throughout the study; plasma GHBP levels were determined only in the first 12 months of Gn-RHa treatment. Height velocity decreased significantly during Gn-RHa treatment; it increased significantly and became higher than the control group after 12 months of Gn-RHa plus hGH treatment. During Gn-RHa therapy alone, bone age progressed less than chronological age, while in the 12 months of Gn-RHa plus hGH treatment there was a slight nonsignificant increase in bone age progression in comparison to controls. Serum IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels decreased significantly at 12 months of Gn-RHa therapy and increased significantly after Gn-RHa plus hGH treatment. Urinary GH levels showed the same behavior. Plasma GH binding to peak II-BP, slightly lower than the prepubertal normal range before treatment, significantly increased after 12 months of Gn-RHa treatment. Therefore, in these girls, during Gn-RHa treatment alone, we have a reduction in GH-IGF-I axis activity. During Gn-RHa plus hGH therapy there was a significant increase in height velocity, in urinary GH levels, in serum IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels. Bone age did not seem to advance faster than chronological age and this may imply a better prediction in adult height. In our opinion, only in a small percentage of patients affected by precocious puberty (with a very low predicted adult height or an important reduction of growth velocity during Gn-RHa treatment) may an association with hGH therapy be useful.

Use of combined Gn-RH agonist and hGH therapy for better attining the goals in precocious puberty treatment.

CISTERNINO, MARIANGELA
1995-01-01

Abstract

We studied 30 girls (age 6.36 +/- 1.21 years, range 4.6-8.8) affected by idiopathic precocious puberty with significant reduction of height velocity (below the 25th centile) at the end of 1 year of Gn-RHa (triptorelin intramuscular depot) treatment, to evaluate GH-IGF-I axis activity and the effects of combined Gn-RHa plus hGH therapy. After 12 months, 15 patients continued Gn-RHa and started hGH therapy for 12 months, while 15 continued treatment with Gn-RHa alone (control group). We evaluated height velocity, bone age, urinary GH, serum IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels throughout the study; plasma GHBP levels were determined only in the first 12 months of Gn-RHa treatment. Height velocity decreased significantly during Gn-RHa treatment; it increased significantly and became higher than the control group after 12 months of Gn-RHa plus hGH treatment. During Gn-RHa therapy alone, bone age progressed less than chronological age, while in the 12 months of Gn-RHa plus hGH treatment there was a slight nonsignificant increase in bone age progression in comparison to controls. Serum IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels decreased significantly at 12 months of Gn-RHa therapy and increased significantly after Gn-RHa plus hGH treatment. Urinary GH levels showed the same behavior. Plasma GH binding to peak II-BP, slightly lower than the prepubertal normal range before treatment, significantly increased after 12 months of Gn-RHa treatment. Therefore, in these girls, during Gn-RHa treatment alone, we have a reduction in GH-IGF-I axis activity. During Gn-RHa plus hGH therapy there was a significant increase in height velocity, in urinary GH levels, in serum IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels. Bone age did not seem to advance faster than chronological age and this may imply a better prediction in adult height. In our opinion, only in a small percentage of patients affected by precocious puberty (with a very low predicted adult height or an important reduction of growth velocity during Gn-RHa treatment) may an association with hGH therapy be useful.
1995
The Pediatrics category covers resources on all aspects of clinical medicine in pediatrics. Pediatric specialties including cardiology, dermatology, gastroenterology, hematology, immunology and infectious diseases, neurology, nutrition, oncology, psychiatry, surgery, tropical medicine, urology, and nephrology are also included. Resources concerned with neonatology and adolescent medicine are also covered.
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
44 Suppl 3
7
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Tatò, L; Saggese, G; Cavallo, L; Antoniazzi, F; Corrias, A; Pasquino, Am; Cisternino, Mariangela
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/580468
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