| Literature DB >> 30224622 |
Tomomi Ikegami1, Shunsuke Araki1, Mami Kuwamura1, Aoi Taku1, Reiko Saito1, Motohide Goto1, Kazuyasu Kubo1, Rinko Kawagoe2, Yukiyo Yamamoto1, Yasusada Kawada3, Koichi Kusuhara1.
Abstract
Growth hormone (GH) therapy for short children born small for gestational age (SGA) has been approved in Japan. It is important to evaluate GH secretion ability before the initiation of GH therapy because there are some differences in dose and medical expenses between short children born SGA and GH deficiency (GHD). This study was designed to elucidate the incidence of GHD and to find a useful marker for detecting it in short SGA children. We retrospectively reviewed medical records to analyze the clinical features of short children born SGA and with GHD who had started GH therapy before the age of 6 in the University Hospital of Occupational and Environmental Health and Kyushu Rousai Hospital. Nine of 22 SGA subjects (41%) had GHD. There were no significant differences between two groups of short SGA children (GHD, non-GHD) in the median of height and serum insulin-like growth factors (IGF)-1 levels at birth or at the start of GH therapy. The probability of GHD was higher if the height standard deviation scores (SD) of the SGA children were lower than -3.2 (odds ratio, 11.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.52 - 89.1, P = 0.013). This study showed that there is an approximately 40% incidence of GHD in short SGA children needing GH treatment. We should do GH stimulation tests for short SGA children whose height SD is lower than -3 to determine the appropriate GH therapy.Entities:
Keywords: growth hormone; insulin-like growth factors; short stature
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30224622 DOI: 10.7888/juoeh.40.253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J UOEH ISSN: 0387-821X