Literature DB >> 14640990

Circulating IGF-I levels in monitoring and predicting efficacy during long-term GH treatment of GH-deficient adults.

S Ezzat1, S Fear, R-C Gaillard, C Gayle, S Marcovitz, T Mattioni, S Nussey, A Rees, E Svanberg.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects of long-term GH in GH-deficient adults, as predicted by IGF-I levels.
METHODS: Patients received GH, 5 microg/kg per day for 1 Month and 10 microg/kg per day for another 12-30 Months. Changes in body composition, cardiac structure/function, serum lipids and quality of life were measured.
RESULTS: There was a significant increase in lean body mass (LBM) (2.21 kg; P<0.0001) after 6 Months, which was sustained throughout treatment. A larger increase occurred in males than females (2.97 vs 1.19 kg; P<0.0001). Total fat mass was reduced (2.56 kg; P<0.0001 (3.26 kg males, 1.63 kg females)). Responsiveness to GH varied greatly, but LBM changes correlated with IGF-I changes (P<0.004). Furthermore, thinner patients experienced greater and progressive LBM increases. There was an increase in ejection fraction (3.85+/-9.95%; P=0.0002) after 6 Months, sustained to 18 Months. These cardiac effects were equal for males and females, and did not correlate with IGF-I levels. Serum low-density lipoprotein/high-density lipoprotein ratios decreased within 6 Months, and were sustained thereafter. Quality of life improved significantly after 6 Months, an effect that was sustained/enhanced as treatment continued. No major adverse events were identified.
CONCLUSIONS: Improved body composition is both reflected by IGF-I changes and predicted inversely by baseline adiposity. Other effects of GH replacement on cardiac function, dyslipidaemia and quality of life, however, do not correlate with circulating IGF-I concentrations. Our findings validate the importance of sustained GH therapy, but caution on the interpretation of IGF-I levels in monitoring the long-term effects of GH treatment.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14640990     DOI: 10.1530/eje.0.1490499

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Endocrinol        ISSN: 0804-4643            Impact factor:   6.664


  1 in total

1.  MOD-4023, a long-acting carboxy-terminal peptide-modified human growth hormone: results of a Phase 2 study in growth hormone-deficient adults.

Authors:  Christian J Strasburger; Peter Vanuga; Juraj Payer; Marija Pfeifer; Vera Popovic; László Bajnok; Miklós Góth; Veˇra Olšovská; L'udmila Trejbalová; Janos Vadasz; Eyal Fima; Ronit Koren; Leanne Amitzi; Martin Bidlingmaier; Oren Hershkovitz; Gili Hart; Beverly M K Biller
Journal:  Eur J Endocrinol       Date:  2016-12-08       Impact factor: 6.664

  1 in total

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