| Literature DB >> 22559301 |
Christopher P Houk1, Peter A Lee.
Abstract
Approximately 10% of children born small for their gestational age (SGA) fail to show catch-up growth and may remain short-statured as adults. Despite treatment guidelines for children born SGA that recommend referral for growth hormone (GH) therapy evaluation and initiation by ages 2 to 4 years, the average age of GH treatment initiation is typically much later, at ages 7 to 9 years. Delayed referral for GH treatment is problematic as studies show younger age at GH treatment initiation in children born SGA is an independent predictor for responses such as optimal growth acceleration, normalization of prepubertal height, and most importantly, adult height (AH). This review discusses the importance and associated challenges of early diagnosis of children born SGA who fail to show catch-up growth, contrasts the recommended age of referral for these patients and the average age of GH treatment initiation, and discusses studies showing the significant positive effects of early referral and treatment with GH on AHs in short-statured children born SGA. To optimize the eventual height in short-statured SGA children who fail to manifest catch-up growth, a lowering of the average age of referral for GH therapy evaluation is needed to better align with consensus recommendations for SGA management. The importance of increasing parental and physician awareness that most children born SGA will do well developmentally and will optimally benefit from early initiation of GH treatment when short-statured is addressed, as is the need to shift the age of referral to better align with consensus recommendations.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22559301 PMCID: PMC3441279 DOI: 10.1186/1687-9856-2012-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-9848
Age at treatment initiation and short-term GH treatment outcomes in children born SGA
| Argente 2007 [ | 39b | MC, C, R, O/2 years | 2 to <4 years | 1.7 at 1 year; approximately 2.5 at 2 years | <0.05 |
| | | | 4 to 5 years | 1.2 at 1 year; approximately 1.8 at 2 years | |
| Carvalho-Furtado 2009 [ | 39 | Ob/1 year | Prepubertal | 0.75 | =0.016 |
| | | | Pubertal | 0.40 | |
| Lee 2008 [ | 433 | MC, NordiNet IOS/≥1 year | Mean age 6.7 to 9.3 | 6.7 years = 1.0 and 0.8; 7.6 years = 0.72; 8.3 years = 0.61; 9.3 years = 0.57 | <0.0001c |
| Ranke 2003 [ | 613 year 1; | KIGS, clinical trials/2 years | Mean age 6.6/statistical models predicting growth response | Year 1: GH dose (35% of variability), age at treatment start (11% of variability) | <0.0001 <0.0001 |
| | 385 year 2 | | | Year 2: HV in year 1 of treatment (29% of variability), age at treatment start (3% of variability), GH dose (2% of variability) | |
| Ross 2010 [ | 208 year 1;119 year 2 | ANSWER Program registry/2 years | Mean age 8.4/males <11 years vs ≥11 years; females <10 years vs ≥10 years | Year 1 boys: <11 years = 0.82; ≥11 years = 0.27Year 1 girls: <10 years = 0.58; ≥10 years = 0.41Year 2 boys: <11 years = 1.23; ≥11 years = 0.59Year 2 girls: <10 years = 1.00; ≥10 years = 0.87 | <0.0001 = 0.093 = 0.0005 = 0.56 |
aAge at treatment initiation; bData are reported for study group 1 with 2 years GH treatment; cMultivariate analysis showed ∆HSDS was dependent on age at the start of treatment. ANSWER, American Norditropin Studies: Web-enabled Research; C, controlled; GH, growth hormone; ∆HSDS, change in height SDS; HV, height velocity; IOS, international outcome study; KIGS, Pharmacia International Growth Database; MC, multicenter; O, open trial; Ob, observational; R, randomized; SDS, standard deviation score.
Age at treatment initiation and long-term GH treatment outcomes in children born SGA
| Dahlgren 2005 [ | 77 | Ob/prepubertal to FH | Prepubertal during >2 years GH therapy vs prepubertal during <2 years GH therapy | Mean gain FH SDS prepubertal for >2 years GH therapy = 1.7; prepubertal for <2 years = 0.9 | <0.001 |
| de Ridder 2008 [ | 150 | Data from 2 previous GH trials; R, DB/5 years[ | Median age 7.5/Statistical model predicting HSDS at puberty | Age at start (−0.27 estimated coefficient)Other significant predictors: HSDS at start (0.71 estimated coefficient), target height SDS (0.13 estimated coefficient), GH dose X IGF-I SDS at start (−0.29 estimated coefficient), gender (−0.34 estimated coefficient) | <0.0001 = 0.009 to <0.0001 |
| Ranke 2010 [ | 161 | KIGS, clinical trials/7.7 years | Median age 7.8 years/Statistical models predicting AH SDS and ∆HSDS | 70% of variability in adult height SDS: HSDS at GH start, ∆HSDS 1st year on GH, years on treatment [younger start, longer phase], maternal HSDS, length SDS at birth, SRS diagnosis | NR |
| | | | | 60% of variability in ∆HSDS: ∆HSDS 1st year GH, H-MPH SDS at GH start, years of GH treatment [younger start, longer phase] | |
| van Pareren 2003 [ | 54 | MC, R, DB/mean 7.8 years | Mean age 8.1/∆HSDS correlations | ∆HSDS from start of GH treatment to AH negatively correlated with age at treatment start: r = −0.36 | <0.01 |
aAge at treatment initiation. AH, adult height; C, controlled; DB, double-blind; FH, final height; GH, growth hormone; HSDS, height SDS; ∆HSDS, change in height SDS; IGF-I, insulin-like growth factor; KIGS, Pharmacia International Growth Database; MC, multicenter; MPH, mid-parental height; NR, not reported; Ob, observational; R, randomized; SDS, standard deviation score; SRS, Silver-Russell syndrome.