| Literature DB >> 27867396 |
Mathew John1, Ekaterina Koledova2, Kanakatte Mylariah Prasanna Kumar3, Harshal Chaudhari4.
Abstract
In clinical practice, every year approximately 150,000 children are referred with short stature (SS) based on a cut-off of fifth percentile. The most important endocrine and treatable cause of SS is growth hormone deficiency (GHD). The lack of reliable data on the prevalence of GHD in India limits estimation of the magnitude of this problem. The diagnosis and treatment of GHD are hurdled with various challenges, restricting the availability of growth hormone (GH) therapy to only a very limited segment of the children in India. This review will firstly summarize the gaps and challenges in diagnosis and treatment of GHD based on literature analysis. Subsequently, it presents suggestions from the members at advisory board meetings to overcome these challenges. The advisory board suggested that early initiation of the therapy could better the chances of achieving final adult height within the normal range for the population. Education and awareness about growth disorders among parents, regular training for physicians, and more emphasis on using the Indian growth charts for growth monitoring would help improve the diagnosis and treatment of children with GHD. Availability of an easy-to-use therapy delivery system could also be beneficial in improving adherence and achieving satisfactory outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27867396 PMCID: PMC5102730 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2967578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Various tests for diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency.
| Study | GH assay | IGF-1 assay | Stimulation tests | Number of patients | Mean age (yrs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raghupathy [ | — | — | LHRH (luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone), TRH (thyrotropin-releasing factor) | 8 | 13.8 |
| Kota et al. [ | Solid-phase, 2-site CIA | Solid-phase, enzyme-labeled CIA | IIH, clonidine | 25 | 8.6 ± 2.9 years |
| Ekbote et al. [ | Solid-phase, 2-site CIA | Solid-phase, enzyme-labeled CIA | Clonidine, glucagon | 28 | 8.6 |
| Khadilkar et al. [ | — | — | Stimulation tests (type not mentioned) or one test with typical phenotype | 15 | 12 |
| Menon et al. [ | — | RIA | IIH, clonidine | 20 | 9.43 ± 3.52 years |
| Bajpai et al. [ | — | — | IIH, clonidine | 96 | 9.9 ± 3.7 years |
| Garg et al. [ | — | — | IIH, clonidine/exercise | 71 | 10.07 ± 3.26 years |
| Kannan et al. [ | RIA | — | IIH, clonidine, diazepam | 30 | 2–14 |
CIA: chemiluminescent immunometric assay; IIH: insulin induced hypoglycaemia; RIA: radioimmunoassay.
Advantages and disadvantages of Indian growth reference charts.
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|
| Growth reference monitoring data is helpful in diagnosing overweight, undernutrition, obesity as per existing growth pattern of the children | All children grow at different pace; variations in growth occur among children due to difference in ethnicity, nutrition intake, and environment. Thus, there are chances that some children may remain undiagnosed |
V. Khadilkar et al. [31–33].
Figure 1Guidelines for plotting growth charts as per guidelines from the Indian Academy of Pediatrics. Tanner et al. [11]; Boersma et al. [12]; van Buuren et al. [13]; Saari [14]. TH: target height; HSDS: height standard deviation score; SD: standard deviation; SDS: standard deviation score.
Figure 2Criteria for referral.
Figure 3Identification, prevention, and management of poor response to growth hormone therapy. Bang et al. [15]. SDS: standard deviation score; SD: standard deviation; HV: height velocity; hGH: human growth hormone.