| Literature DB >> 34745010 |
Netanya I Pollock1, Laurie E Cohen1,2.
Abstract
Growth hormone (GH) deficiency is a common pituitary hormone deficiency in childhood cancer survivors (CCS). The identification, diagnosis, and treatment of those individuals at risk are important in order to minimize associated morbidities that can be ameliorated by treatment with recombinant human GH therapy. However, GH and insulin-like growth factor-I have been implicated in tumorigenesis, so there has been concern over the use of GH therapy in patients with a history of malignancy. Reassuringly, GH therapy has not been shown to increase risk of tumor recurrence. These patients have an increased risk for development of meningiomas, but this may be related to their history of cranial irradiation rather than to GH therapy. In this review, we detail the CCS who are at risk for GHD and the existing evidence on the safety profile of GH therapy in this patient population.Entities:
Keywords: brain tumors; childhood cancer survivors (CCS); growth hormone deficiency; growth hormone treatment; secondary neoplasm; tumor recurrence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34745010 PMCID: PMC8569790 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.745932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Radiation therapy and growth hormone deficiency in primary central nervous system tumors.
| CNS Primary Malignancy | Radiation Dose | GH Abnormality | Studies |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 30-50 Gy | Dependent on radiation schedule, age, length of follow-up and diagnostic thresholds; incidence may be lower if proton RT used | ( |
| > 37.5 Gy | 87% at 2.5 years with GHD | ||
| <37.5 Gy | 33% at 2.5 years with GHD | ||
| Pituitary tumors or suprasellar region | 24-56 Gy | Commonly GHD on presentation due to tumor location | |
| -Pituitary adenoma | 35-45 Gy | Universal GHD within 5 years | ( |
| -Suprasellar glioma/optic chiasmatic-hypothalamic glioma | 45-55 Gy | Almost all within 2-3 years | ( |
| -Craniopharyngioma | 54 Gy | In almost all (92%) following treatment (surgery +/- post- operative radiation) | ( |
| -Germ cell tumor | 24-36 Gy | Limited evidence on documented GH levels. | ( |
| Growth retardation on presentation with no new cases after RT |
CNS, central nervous system; Gy, gray; GH, growth hormone; GHD, growth hormone deficiency; RT, radiation treatment.
Cranial radiation therapy and growth hormone deficiency in non-central nervous system tumors.
| Non-CNS Primary Malignancy | Radiation Dose | GH Abnormality | Studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conditioning for hematopoietic stem cell transplant (leukemia, neuroblastoma) | 7- 8 Gy single dose TBI | No GHD | ( |
| 10-12 Gy TBI | Isolated GHD in some | ( | |
| CNS prophylaxis or CNS disease in acute lymphoblastic leukemia | 18-24 Gy cranial radiation; | Pubertal GH insufficiency (reduced spontaneous GH secretion); | ( |
| 12 Gy cranial radiation (for infants) | Compensated GHD (reduced stimulated but normal spontaneous GH levels); | ||
| Isolated GHD in < 30% | |||
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma and tumors of skull base | 45-66 Gy cranial radiation | GHD in almost all adult patients (96.8%) in 5 years | ( |
| Retinoblastoma | Estimated 13-65 Gy to HP axis | 30% with GHD; | ( |
| 50% GHD with 20-30 Gy to HP axis |
Gy, gray; GH, growth hormone; TBI, total body irradiation; GHD, growth hormone deficiency; HP, hypothalamic-pituitary.
Post-marketing or large observational cohort studies.
| Firth author, year (ref) | Study Cohort | Total Cohort size, n | Number on GH, n | Mean age at GH therapy, y | Mean duration of GH therapy, y | Mean duration of follow-up, y | Person-years of follow-up, n | Primary endpoint | Comparison group | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Savendahl, 2021 ( | NordiNet international Outcome Study and ANSWER Program | 37,702 | 37.702 | 9.7 | 3.5 | Not mentioned | 130,476 | Long-term safety | Within NordiNet and ANSWER cohort | Incidence of adverse effects correlated with increased mortality risk category |
| Up to 25 years | ||||||||||
| Savendahl, 2020 ( | SAGhE cohort (comprehensive) | 24,232 | 24.232 | 10.5 | 5.0 | 16.5 | 400,229 | Long-term overall and cause specific mortality | Within SAGhe cohort | Mortality not associated with mean daily or cumulative GH dose. Increased mortality risk in higher mortality risk diagnoses |
| Swerdlow, 2018 ( | SAGhE cohort (Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden, UK) | 10,403 | 10,403 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 14.9 | 154,795 | Incidence of meningioma in GH treated patients | Within SAGhe cohort | Increased risk of meningioma following GH treatment. Greater risk in patients who received cranial radiation |
| Child, 2018 ( | GeNeSIS | 22,845 | 22,311 | 9.5 | 4.9 | 4.2 | 104,000 | Standardized mortality radio and standardized incidence ratio for mortality, diabetes and primary cancer | Within the GeNeSIS cohort | Overall risk of death not elevated. Most common SN was meningioma; all patients with secondary meningioma received radiation. |
| Swerdlow, 2017 ( | SAGhE cohort (comprehensive) | 23,984 | 23.984 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 16.5 for mortality | 396,344 for mortality | Cancer incidence and cancer mortality | Within the SAGhE cohort | Cancer risk unrelated to duration or cumulative GH dose |
| 14.8 for cancer incidence | 154,371 for cancer incidence | |||||||||
| Carel, 2012 ( | SAGhE cohort (France) | 6,928 | 6,928 | 15.1 (at end of treatment) | 3.9 | 17.3 | 116,403 | All-cause and cause-specific mortality | Within the SAGhE cohort | Mortality rates increased, particularly in those with higher GH doses. |
| Savendahl, 2012 ( | SAGhE cohort (Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden) | 5,299 | 5,299 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 46,556 | Vital status, cause of death | Within the SAGhE cohort | Majority of deaths were due to accident or suicide. |
| Bell, 2010 ( | NCGS | 54,996 | 54,996 | 10.3 (age of enrollment) | 3.6 | Not mentioned | 195,419 of treatment | Safety data and adverse events | Within the NCGS cohort | Overall safe profile. Craniopharyngioma was largest group of tumor recurrence. |
ref, reference; GH, growth hormone; y, year; ANSWER, American Norditropin® Studies: Web Enabled Research; SAGhe, Safety and Appropriateness of Growth hormone treatments in Europe; GeNeSIS, Genetics and NeuroEndocrinology of Short Stature International Study; NCGS, National Cooperative Growth Study.
Childhood cancer studies.
| First author, year (ref) | Study Cohort | Total Cohort size, n | Median age, y | Median duration follow up, y | Number on GH, n | Median age at start of GH, y | Median duration of GH therapy, y | Comparison group | Primary endpoint | Conclusion | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journy, 2021 ( | FCCSS | 7,670 | 6 (at primary cancer diagnosis) | Not mentioned | 47 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | FCSS patients matched by sex, year of cancer diagnosis, and follow-up time | Clinical and therapeutic risk factors associated with CNS SN | GH therapy not associated with CNS SN. Secondary meningioma associated with radiation. | ||
| 29 (at subsequent cancer diagnosis) | ||||||||||||
| Thomas-Teinturier, 2020 ( | Euro2K cohort | 2852 | GH treated | Non-GH treated | GH treated | Non-GH treated | 196 | 10 | 4 | Matched by radiation dose, gender, age at first diagnosis cancer, year of first diagnosis, and follow-up duration | Impact of GH treatment on SN | GH therapy does not increase risk of SN. |
| 4 | 4 | 26 | 27 | |||||||||
| Woodmansee, 2013 ( | GeNeSIS | 421 | 5.4 | 2.1 | 394 | Not mentioned | 2.9 | Within GeNeSIS, non-GH treated survivors | Incidence of SN in GH-treated childhood cancer survivors | Increased risk of SN in GH-treated childhood cancer survivors. Most common SN was meningioma. | ||
| HypoCCS | 280 | 8.4 | 2.9 | 244 | Not mentioned | 6.8 | Within HypoCCS, non-GH treated survivors | |||||
| Patterson, 2014 ( | CCSS | 12,098 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 338 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Within CCSS | Incidence of CNS SN in GH-treated cancer survivors | No increase in risk of CNS-SN with GH treatment. | ||
| Mackenzie, 2011 ( | Individual study | 224 | GH treated | Controls | 14.5 | 224 | Not mentioned | 8.0 | From radiotherapy database, matched by total radiation dose, age at diagnosis, duration follow-up, radiation target for primary tumor | Incidence of recurrence and SN after CNS irradiation | No increased risk for tumor recurrence or SN in GH-treated CNS survivors. | |
| 33 | 29 | |||||||||||
| Sklar, 2002 ( | CCSS | 13,539 | GH treated | Non-GH treated | 6.2 | 361 | 10 | 4.6 | Within CCSS, non-GH treated survivors | Risk of recurrence and SN in GH treated survivors | GH does not increase risk of tumor recurrence or death. | |
| 3.5 | 7.2 | |||||||||||
| Ergun-Longmire, 2006 ( | CCSS | 14,108 | GH treated | Non-GH treated | 8.8 | 361 | 11 | 4.6 | Within CCSS, non-GH treated survivors | Risk of recurrence and SN in GH treated survivors | GH-treated survivors have higher risk of SN than untreated. Most common SN was meningioma. | |
| 3.5 | 7.1 | |||||||||||
| Darendeliler, 2006 ( | KIGS (Pfizer International Growth Database) | 1,038 | 7.0 – 12.1 (varied by tumor type) | 5.8 (patients without recurrence) | 1,038 | 8.0 – 12.6 (varied by tumor type) | 2.3 – 2.8 (varied by tumor type) | Within KIGS database (all patients treated with GH) | Risk of tumor recurrence based on tumor type | Recurrence highest in those with craniopharyngioma. Dose of GH did not differ between patients with and without recurrence. | ||
FCCSS, French Childhood Cancer Survivor Study; GeNeSIS, Genetics and Neuro Endocrinology of Short Stature International Study; HypoCCS, Hypopituitary Control and Complication Study; CCSS, Childhood Cancer Survivor Study; Kabi International Growth Study (Pfizer International Growth Database); GH, growth hormone; y, year; CNS, central nervous system; SN, secondary neoplasm.