scholarly journals Metabolic parameters and adipokine profile during GH replacement therapy in children with GH deficiency

2007 ◽  
Vol 156 (3) ◽  
pp. 353-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Ciresi ◽  
M C Amato ◽  
A Criscimanna ◽  
A Mattina ◽  
C Vetro ◽  
...  

Objective: GH replacement therapy in children with GH deficiency (GHD) mainly promotes linear growth. Not only have very few studies fully analyzed the metabolic consequences of GH therapy, but also the question as to whether GH may affect adipokine secretion has been insufficiently investigated. Our aim was to study the effects of GH replacement therapy on auxological data, lipid and glycemic profiles, insulin homeostasis (HOMA-IR) and serum adipokines in children. Methods: This was a 1-year prospective study. Thirty-four GHD children (11.6 ± 2.6 years) and thirty healthy matched controls were enrolled. Children affected by GHD were studied both before beginning continuous GH replacement therapy and again at 12 months. Results: At the beginning of the study, total and LDL cholesterol were higher in GHD children than in controls (P<0.001), whereas HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, insulin, HOMA-IR, leptin, and adiponectin were similar. At 12 months of continuous GH replacement therapy in the GHD group, there was a significant increase in both auxological data and IGF-I (P<0.001); total cholesterol (P<0.001), LDL (P<0.001), triglycerides (P<0.005), and leptin (P<0.001) decreased significantly; HDL (P<0.003), insulin (P<0.001), HOMA-IR (P<0.001) increased while adiponectin was unmodified. Furthermore, IGF-IΔ showed an inverse correlation with leptin Δ (ρ = −0.398, P = 0.02). Conclusions: In GHD children, the evaluation of metabolic parameters proves to be a useful tool for the evaluation of auxological parameters during GH replacement therapy. In our study, GH replacement therapy in GHD children improved final height, restored IGF-I levels, reduced leptin levels, and improved the lipid profile, without producing any unfavorable effects on glucose metabolism.

2001 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 425-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. M. Drake ◽  
S. J. Howell ◽  
J. P. Monson ◽  
S. M. Shalet

Abstract Until the advent of modern neuroradiological imaging techniques in 1989, a diagnosis of GH deficiency in adults carried little significance other than as a marker of hypothalamo-pituitary disease. The relatively recent recognition of a characteristic clinical syndrome associated with failure of spontaneous GH secretion and the potential reversal of many of its features with recombinant human GH has prompted a closer examination of the physiological role of GH after linear growth is complete. The safe clinical practice of GH replacement demands a method of judging overall GH status, but there is no biological marker in adults that is the equivalent of linear growth in a child by which to judge the efficacy of GH replacement. Assessment of optimal GH replacement is made difficult by the apparent diverse actions of GH in health, concern about the avoidance of iatrogenic acromegaly, and the growing realization that an individual’s risk of developing certain cancers may, at least in part, be influenced by cumulative exposure to the chief mediator of GH action, IGF-I. As in all areas of clinical practice, strategies and protocols vary between centers, but most physicians experienced in the management of pituitary disease agree that GH is most appropriately begun at low doses, building up slowly to the final maintenance dose. This, in turn, is best determined by a combination of clinical response and measurement of serum IGF-I, avoiding supraphysiological levels of this GH-dependent peptide. Numerous studies have helped define the optimum management of GH replacement during childhood. The recent requirement to measure and monitor GH status in adult life has called into question the appropriateness of simplistic weight- and surface area-based dosing regimens for the management of GH deficiency in childhood, with reliance on linear growth as the sole marker of GH action. It is clear that the monitoring of parameters other than linear growth to help refine GH therapy should now be incorporated into childhood GH treatment protocols. Further research will be required to define the optimal management of the transition from pediatric to adult GH replacement; this transition will only be possible once the benefits of GH in mature adults are defined and accepted by pediatric and adult endocrinologists alike.


2004 ◽  
pp. 153-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Golgeli ◽  
F Tanriverdi ◽  
C Suer ◽  
C Gokce ◽  
C Ozesmi ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE: Impaired cognitive function has been demonstrated in adults with growth hormone (GH) deficiency (GHD) by using different neuropsychological tests. Despite several studies, present knowledge about the impact of GHD and GH replacement therapy (GHRT) on cognitive function is limited. P300 event-related potential (ERP) application is a well-established neurophysiological approach in the assessment of cognitive functions including the updating of working memory content and the speed of stimulus evaluation. GHD is a well-known feature of Sheehan's syndrome and cognitive changes due to GHD and the effects of GHRT remain to be clarified. The present study was designed to investigate the effects of GHD and 6 months of GHRT on cognitive function in patients with Sheehan's syndrome by using P300 latency. DESIGN AND METHODS: The study comprised 14 patients with Sheehan's syndrome (mean age, 49.5+/-7.8 years) and 10 age-, education- and sex-matched healthy controls. With hormone replacement therapy, basal hormone levels other than GH were stable before enrollment and throughout the GHRT. The diagnosis of GH deficiency was established by insulin-tolerance test (ITT), and mean peak level of GH in response to insulin hypoglycemia was 0.77+/-0.35 mIU/l. Treatment with GH was started at a dose of 0.45 IU (0.15 mg)/day in month 1, was increased to 0.9 IU (0.30 mg)/day in month 2 and was maintained at 2 IU (0.66 mg)/day. Initially baseline auditory ERPs in patients and controls were recorded at frontal (Fz), central (Cz), and parietal (P3 and P4) electrode sites. In the patient group, ERPs were re-evaluated after 6 months of GH replacement therapy. During each session P300 amplitude and latency were measured. RESULTS: Mean serum insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) concentration in the patient group before GHRT was 23+/-13 ng/ml. After 6 months of GH therapy mean IGF-I significantly increased to an acceptable level, 234+/-71 ng/ml (P<0.05). The mean latencies (at all electrode sites) of the patients before GHRT were found to be significantly prolonged when compared with those of normal controls (P<0.05). After 6 months of GHRT mean P300 latencies (at all electrode sites) were decreased significantly when compared with latencies before treatment (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The present study, using P300 ERP latencies, therefore suggests an impairment of cognitive abilities due to severe GHD in patients with Sheehan's syndrome and an improvement of cognitive function after 6 months of physiological GHRT. Moreover, this was a novel application of P300 ERP latencies in cognitive function detection in patients with GHD. Further studies with different patient groups need to be done to assess the clinical use of this electrophysiological method in the diagnosis of cognitive dysfunction due to GHD.


2002 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
pp. 1088-1093 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annamaria Colao ◽  
Carolina di Somma ◽  
Rosario Pivonello ◽  
Alberto Cuocolo ◽  
Letizia Spinelli ◽  
...  

Increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality were reported in GH deficiency (GHD), and GH replacement can ameliorate cardiac abnormalities of adult GHD patients. To test the potential progression of untreated GHD on the cardiovascular risk and cardiac function, cardiovascular risk factors, cardiac size, and performance were prospectively evaluated in 15 GHD patients (age, 18–56 yr) who were treated with recombinant GH at the dose of 0.15–1.0 mg/d, 15 GHD patients (age, 18–56 yr) who refused GH replacement, and 30 healthy subjects (age, 18–53 yr). Electrocardiogram, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and heart rate measurement, serum IGF-I, total cholesterol, low- and high-density lipoprotein (LDL, HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides, and fibrinogen level assay, echocardiography, and equilibrium radionuclide angiography were performed basally and after 12 months. At study entry, low IGF-I levels, unfavorable lipid profile, and inadequate cardiac and physical performance were found in GHD patients compared with controls. After 12 months of GH treatment, IGF-I levels normalized; HDL-cholesterol levels, left ventricular (LV) mass index (LVMi), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) at peak exercise, peak filling rate, exercise duration and capacity significantly increased; total- and LDL-cholesterol levels significantly decreased. After 12 months in GH-untreated GHD patients, IGF-I levels remained stable, and HDL-cholesterol levels, LVEF both at rest and at peak exercise, and exercise capacity were further reduced; total- and LDL-cholesterol levels increased slightly. LVEF at rest and its response at peak exercise normalized in 60 and 53.3%, respectively, of GH-treated patients and in none of the GH-untreated patients. In conclusion, 12 months of GH replacement normalized IGF-I and improved lipid profile and cardiac performance in adult GHD patients. A similar period of GH deprivation induced a further impairment of lipid profile and cardiac performance. This finding strongly supports the need of GH replacement in adult GHD patients.


2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 2959-2964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wing Leung ◽  
Susan R. Rose ◽  
Yinmei Zhou ◽  
Michael L. Hancock ◽  
Stephen Burstein ◽  
...  

PURPOSE: Little is known about the long-term efficacy or adverse effects of growth hormone (GH) replacement therapy in survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who have GH deficiency. We investigated the adult height of patients who had received GH and estimated their risk of leukemia relapse or development of a second malignancy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Of 910 patients treated for ALL at a single institution, 47 had received GH replacement therapy. The linear growth of these 47 patients was retrospectively evaluated. Their risk of leukemia relapse or second malignancy was compared with that of survivors who did not undergo GH therapy. RESULTS: The median height SD score at the start of GH therapy had decreased by 1.0 since the time of diagnosis of ALL. After a median duration of 4.5 years of GH therapy, adult height SD scores improved and approached height SD scores at the time of diagnosis of ALL. The median adult height for male patients was 173.2 cm (range, 157 to 191.9 cm), and for female patients, it was 158.1 cm (range, 141 to 168 cm). None of the patients developed adverse effects requiring discontinuation of GH treatment. At the 7-year and 11-year landmarks in continuous hematologic remission, there was no statistical evidence that GH therapy was associated with leukemia relapse or development of a second malignancy. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that GH replacement therapy is safe and efficacious for the correction of GH deficiency in survivors of childhood ALL.


2001 ◽  
pp. 711-716 ◽  
Author(s):  
JA Janssen ◽  
FM van der Toorn ◽  
LJ Hofland ◽  
P van Koetsveld ◽  
F Broglio ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE: Ghrelin stimulates growth hormone (GH) secretion both in vivo and in vitro. Ghrelin is mainly produced in and released from the stomach but it is probably also produced in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. Whether pituitary GH release is under the control of ghrelin from the stomach and/or from the arcuate nucleus is not known. Moreover, no data on the feedback of GH on systemic ghrelin concentrations are available. It has recently been suggested that ghrelin may induce obesity. DESIGN: In this study, we addressed the following two questions: a) are circulating ghrelin levels increased in human GH deficiency (GHD), and b) does GH treatment modify ghrelin levels in human GHD? METHODS: The study group consisted of 23 patients with GHD. Eighteen had developed adult-onset GHD and five had developed GHD in their childhood (childhood-onset GHD). Ghrelin was measured with a commercially available radioimmunoassay. All measurements were performed twice, first at baseline, before the start of GH replacement therapy, and then again after one year of therapy. GH doses were adjusted every 3 months, targeting serum total IGF-I levels within the normal gender- and age-related reference values for the healthy population. Maintenance doses were continued once the target serum total IGF-I levels were reached. RESULTS: The sum of skinfolds and body water increased significantly, body fat mass and percentage body fat decreased significantly and body mass index and waist-hip ratio were not significantly changed by one year of GH replacement therapy.Before the start of GH replacement therapy, mean value and range for fasting ghrelin in the studied GHD subjects tended to be lower in comparison with healthy subjects in the control group although the difference did not reach significance (GHD ghrelin mean 67.8 pmol/l, range 37.6-116.3 pmol/l; control mean 83.8 pmol/l, range 35.4-132 pmol/l; P=0.11).One year of GH replacement therapy did not modify circulating ghrelin levels (ghrelin before GH therapy: 67.8 pmol/l, range 37.6-116.3 pmol/l; after GH therapy: 65.3 pmol/l, range 35.8-112.6; P=0.56). CONCLUSIONS: We did not observe elevated ghrelin levels in adult GHD subjects and GH replacement therapy did not modify circulating ghrelin levels, despite significant decreases in body fat mass and percentage body fat. It is conceivable that the lack of ghrelin modifications after long-term GH therapy was due to the reduction of adiposity and insulin on one hand, and increased GH secretion on the other. However, it is still possible that systemic ghrelin is involved in the development of obesity, both in normal and GHD subjects.


2010 ◽  
Vol 95 (9) ◽  
pp. 4449-4454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vera Popovic ◽  
Anders F. Mattsson ◽  
Rolf C. Gaillard ◽  
Patrick Wilton ◽  
Maria Kołtowska-Häggström ◽  
...  

Context: The association between IGFs and cancer in adults with GH deficiency (GHD) receiving GH replacement requires investigation. Objective: The objective was to examine the association between IGF-I, IGF-binding protein 2 (IGFBP-2), and IGFBP-3 sd scores (SDSs) in GH-deficient adults receiving GH therapy and the occurrence of de novo malignancies. Design: Serum IGF-I, IGFBP-2, and IGFBP-3 levels in GH-deficient patients who developed a malignancy since receiving GH were compared with patients with idiopathic GHD but without malignancy. Measurements were related to age-, sex-, and body mass index-specific SDS reference regions. Setting: The setting included the KIMS (the Pfizer International Metabolic Database). Patients: One hundred patients with de novo malignancy during GH therapy were compared with 325 patients with idiopathic GHD without malignancy. Intervention(s): Serum samples were obtained as close as possible to the diagnosis of malignancy, or after approximately 2 yr of GH replacement in KIMS. Main Outcome Measures: Associations between relative risk (RR) of malignancy and IGF-I, IGFBP-2, and IGFBP-3 SDSs were assessed in multiple log-linear Poisson working regression models, controlling for age, sex, onset of GHD, and GH naivety at KIMS entry. Results: No association between IGF-I SDSs and RR was observed (P = 0.48). Increasing IGFBP-2 and IGFBP-3 SDSs were associated with increasing RRs [18% per unit IGFBP-2 SDSs (95% confidence interval, 7–30%; P = 0.0006), 13% per unit IGFBP-3 SDS (2–26%; P = 0.01)]. Conclusions: IGF-I levels targeted to within normal age-related reference ranges during GH replacement were not associated with the occurrence of malignancies. Higher IGFBP-2 and/or IGFBP-3 SDSs may be associated with increased cancer risk.


2000 ◽  
pp. 254-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
LM Evans ◽  
JS Davies ◽  
RA Anderson ◽  
GR Ellis ◽  
SK Jackson ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVES: Controversy persists with regard to the atherogenic risk associated with adult growth hormone deficiency (GHD). Endothelial dysfunction and enhanced oxidative stress are early features of atherogenesis. Therefore, we have studied the effect of three months of low dose GH replacement therapy (0.03IU/kg/day) on these parameters in GHD adults. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Eight hypopituitary GHD adults (4 male, 4 female), who were receiving conventional hormone replacement therapy, were studied before and after 3 months of GH replacement (0.03IU/kg/day). All observations obtained were compared with similar measurements made in 8 matched control subjects. All study subjects were non-smokers, normotensive and gave no personal or family history of premature vascular disease. Endothelial function was assessed using a specialised vessel wall tracking system to measure endothelium-dependent, flow-mediated, brachial artery dilatation (FMD). Measurements were repeated following glyceryl-trinitrate (GTN) (endothelium-independent dilatation). Oxidative stress was assessed by directly measuring lipid-derived free radicals in venous blood by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Fasting lipids, insulin, plasma glucose and IGF-I were also measured at baseline and following GH replacement. RESULTS: FMD, expressed as a percentage change from resting base-line diameter, was significantly impaired in the pre-treatment GHD patients compared with controls (3.1+/-2.1% vs 6.1+/-0.9%, P<0. 001; means+/-s.d.) indicating endothelial dysfunction. Significant increase in FMD was noted following GH therapy (3.1+/-2.1% vs 6. 5+/-1.9%, P<0.001). Free radicals (arbitrary units) were elevated in the pre-treatment GHD patients compared with controls (0.36+/-0.09 vs 0.11+/-0.12, P<0.05) and fell significantly following GH therapy (0.23+/-0.03 vs 0.36+/-0.09, P<0.05), although they remained elevated compared with controls. Fasting insulin was significantly higher (25.9+/-18.8 vs 13.9+/-6.7mu/l, P<0.05) and IGF-I concentrations lower (10.8+/-4.7 vs 20.2+/-6.3nmol/l, P<0.05) in the pre-treatment GHD subjects. After treatment there were no changes in insulin concentration, although IGF-I levels were normalised (10. 8+/-2.3 vs 23.6+/-11.4nmol/l, P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Endothelial dysfunction and enhanced oxidative stress are features of adult GHD. This study suggests plausible mechanisms underlying any proatherogenic tendency in adult GHD and demonstrates improvement of these factors following GH replacement.


1993 ◽  
Vol 136 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. R. Donahue ◽  
W. G. Beamer

ABSTRACT Although GH is known to regulate somatic growth during development, its role in regulating adult body composition is less well defined. The effects of GH on individual body compartments – water, fat, protein and mineral – are achieved both by the action of GH and by a GH-induced hormone, insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I). We used a genetic model of GH deficiency, the 'little' (gene symbol lit) mouse, to determine the GH regulation of IGF-I and its insulin-like growth factor-binding proteins (IGFBPs) and to define the interaction between these hormones and each body compartment in adults. Our results showed that GH-deficient lit/lit mice had reduced levels of serum IGF-I (range 38–130 μg/l) compared with normal lit/+ littermates (range 432–567 μg/l) between 2 and 52 weeks of age. The lit/lit mice did not experience the fivefold increase in IGF-I between 2 and 4 weeks of age that was seen in lit/+ mice. In lit/lit serum, overall binding of 125I-labelled IGF-I to the four IGFBPs was reduced, solely in response to a reduced amount of IGFBP-3. No overall differences were found between lit/lit and lit/+ mice in the binding of 125I-labelled IGF-I to IGFBP-2, -1 or -4. Age-related declines in IGF-I and IGFBPs were seen in lit/lit mice. However, adult levels of IGF-I were maintained in lit/+ mice to at least 52 weeks of age, as were levels of IGFBP-1 and -4, while IGFBP-3 and -2 declined with age. With respect to body composition, comparison of lit/lit with lit/+ mice showed that the lit/lit mice were characterized by abnormally large adipose tissue stores and reduced body water, protein and mineral from 2 weeks onward. These changes occurred despite normal energy intake in lit/lit mice up to 52 weeks of age, indicating that neither undernutrition nor hyperphagia is characteristic of this GH-induced model of obesity. Furthermore, lit/lit males accrued more body fat beginning at an earlier age than lit/lit females. With advancing age, the per cent body fat increased in both lit/lit and lit/+ mice, while the per cent body water and mineral declined. In lit/lit but not lit/+ mice, per cent protein also declined with age. The changes in body water and fat are attributable to lack of adequate GH in the genetically GH-deficient lit/lit mouse. On the other hand, the changes in body protein are more likely to be effects of IGF-I. Changes in mineral observed in lit/lit mice could be the result of action by GH, IGF-I or both hormones. Therefore, when GH is chronically manipulated by GH deficiency as in lit/lit mice, by GH excess as in acromegaly, or by GH therapy, all four body compartments are affected, suggesting that GH therapy is most valuable when the treatment goal is to alter overall body composition. Journal of Endocrinology (1993) 136, 91–104


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