| Literature DB >> 20148087 |
Todd D Nebesio1, Erica A Eugster.
Abstract
The treatment of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency is complex. In addition to disease control, important therapeutic goals are the maintenance of normal growth and the acquisition of normal reproductive function. Here, data regarding final adult height (FH) in patients with CAH will be reviewed. Additional difficulties associated with CAH, including risks of obesity and hypertension, will be discussed. Information about fertility and reproductive outcomes in men and women with CAH will also be summarized. Although the treatment of each child with CAH needs to be individualized, close medical followup and laboratory monitoring along with good compliance can often result in positive clinical outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20148087 PMCID: PMC2817857 DOI: 10.1155/2010/298937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-9848
Published reports of final height data in adults with CAH from 2001 to 2008.
| First author (reference) | Location | Year | Number at FH | Mean FH SDS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meta-analysis [ | Various | 2001 | 561 | −1.37 (−1.57 M; −1.24 F) |
| Eugster et al. [ | USA | 2001 | 23 | −1.03 |
| Hargitai et al. [ | Europe | 2001 | 124 | −1.55 M; −1.25 F |
| Cabrera et al. [ | USA | 2001 | 30 | −1.65 M |
|
Manoli et al. [ | Greece | 2002 | 48 | −0.57 M (SW); −0.61 F (SW); −1.05 M (SV); |
| −1.4 F (SV); +0.3 F (NC) | ||||
| Muirhead et al. [ | Canada | 2002 | 54 | −1.4 M; −1.1 F |
| Van der Kamp et al. [ | Netherlands | 2002 | 53 | −1.27 M (SW); −1.25 F (SW); −1.51 M (SV); −0.96 F (SV) |
| Pinto et al. [ | France | 2003 | 27 | −2.0 (SW, SV); −1.2 (NC) |
| Balsamo et al. [ | Italy | 2003 | 55 | −0.95 (SW); −1.36 (SV); −0.85 (NC) |
| Brunelli et al. [ | Italy | 2003 | 93 | −1.3 (SW); −1.8 (SV); −1.7 (NC) |
| Grigorescu-Sido et al. [ | Romania | 2003 | 17 | −1.49 |
| Tung et al. [ | Taiwan | 2005 | 44 | −1.4 M; −1.2 F |
| Lemos-Marini et al. [ | Brazil | 2005 | 27 | −1.57 |
| Aycan et al. [ | Turkey | 2006 | 5 | −1.77 |
| Sciannamblo et al. [ | Italy | 2006 | 30 | −1.71 M; −1.06 F |
| Bonfig et al. [ | Germany | 2007 | 125 | −1.0 M (SW); −0.8 F (SW); −1.4 M (SV); −1.3 F (SV) |
| Chakhtoura et al. [ | France | 2008 | 38 | −0.94 (−1.35 M; −0.80 F) |
| Hoepffner et al. [ | Germany | 2008 | 39 | −1.2a∗; +0.1b∗ |
FH = final height; SDS = standard deviation score; M = male; F = female; SW = salt-wasting; SV = simple-virilizing; NC = non-classic; apatients born before 1975 (n = 13); bpatients born from 1975 to 1986 (n = 26); *value is corrected FH SDS (or FH SDS—target height SDS).
Proposed five stage classification of TARTs (modified from [69, 79]).
| Stage | Histological description | Testicular ultrasound | Reversibility | Treatment options |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Adrenal rest cells within the rete testis | Undetectable by testicular ultrasound | +++ | None |
| 2 | Proliferation of adrenal rest cells due to growth-promoting factors (such as Angiotensin II and ACTH) | May become visible as one or more small hypoechogenic lesions | +++ | Increase dose and intensify glucocorticoid therapy |
| 3 | Growth of adrenal rest cells leads to compression of the rete testis, obstruction of the seminiferous tubules, and evidence of gonadal dysfunction (↑ FSH, ↑ LH, ↓ sperm, ↓ inhibin B) | Detectable | ++ | Increase dose and intensify glucocorticoid therapy. Surgery can also be considered. |
| 4 | Further hypertrophy and hyperplasia of adrenal rest cells with progressive obstruction of rete testis with fibrosis within the tumor and focal lymphocytic infiltration | Detectable—small tumors may form a single lobulated structure | −/+ | Consider surgery but may not reverse testicular damage. |
| 5 | Chronic obstruction leads to destruction of surrounding testicular parenchyma | Detectable | − | None—irreversible damage. |