Literature DB >> 15157561

Rational use of the laboratory for childhood and adult growth hormone deficiency.

Raj Pandian1, Jon M Nakamoto.   

Abstract

No laboratory test has sufficient diagnostic sensitivity and specificity to serve as a gold standard for the diagnosis for GHD: therefore, test results must be interpreted after assessment of risk for GHD is determined on clinical grounds. Growth data are particularly crucial for diagnosis of childhood GHD;history of known pituitary damage and presence or absence of other pituitary hormone deficiencies are the critical elements for the diagnosis of adult GHD. New reference preparations are available for GH and IGF-I and should greatly aid interassay comparisons when the preparations are universally adopted.GH stimulation testing remains a key part of the diagnosis of adult GHD, but is currently being de-emphasized for the diagnosis of pediatric GHD. Better interassay comparative data and organized clinical collaboration between clinicians and test manufacturers/laboratories to set rational clinical diagnostic cutoffs would improve greatly the clinical usefulness of GH stimulation testing. The availability of statistically sound age- and sex-related normative data for IGF-I and IGFBP3 make these key tests for the diagnosis of childhood GHD. Although IGF-I may not be a perfect test for the diagnosis of adult GHD, it may be sufficiently informative in many cases to warrant using it ona routine basis. IGF-I also has a role in monitoring the safety of adult patients who are on GH treatment; studies are underway to determine if IGF-I may be useful in the future for optimization of GH dosaging.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15157561     DOI: 10.1016/j.cll.2004.01.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Lab Med        ISSN: 0272-2712            Impact factor:   1.935


  2 in total

1.  Plasma growth hormones, P300 event-related potential and test of variables of attention (TOVA) are important neuroendocrinological predictors of early cognitive decline in a clinical setting: evidence supported by structural equation modeling (SEM) parameter estimates.

Authors:  Eric R Braverman; Thomas J H Chen; Thomas J Prihoda; William Sonntag; Brian Meshkin; B William Downs; Julie F Mengucci; Seth H Blum; Alison Notaro; Vanessa Arcuri; Michael Varshavskiy; Kenneth Blum
Journal:  Age (Dordr)       Date:  2007-05-12

2.  Does priming with sex steroids improve the diagnosis of normal growth hormone secretion in short children?

Authors:  Ashraf Soliman; Ashraf Adel; Aml Sabt; Elkhansa Elbukhari; Hannah Ahmed; Vincenzo De Sanctis
Journal:  Indian J Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2014-11
  2 in total

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