4.5 Article

Precocious puberty or growth hormone deficiency as initial presentation in Mayer-Rokitansky-kuster-Hauser syndrome: a clinical report of 5 cases

Journal

BMC PEDIATRICS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12887-022-03474-0

Keywords

Mayer-Rokitansky-kuster-Hauser syndrome; Children; Precocious puberty; Growth hormone deficiency; Case report

Categories

Funding

  1. Key Clinical Special Discipline Construction Program of Fuzhou, Fujian, P.R.C [201610191]
  2. Clinical medical center [201808310]
  3. Basic and Clinical Study of Rare Disease [ZD-2019-01]

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Our case report presents five patients with Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser syndrome (MRKHS), four of whom had precocious puberty and one had growth hormone deficiency (GHD). These patients have unique endocrine features and genetic analysis results. Advanced bone age and pelvic MRI confirmed the absence of uterus, while one patient had a deletion in the 17q12 gene.
Background We report five patients with Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser syndrome (MRKHS), four of whom presented with precocious puberty and one with growth hormone deficiency (GHD. Our five children add to the growing endocrine data base of MRKHS. Case presentation We retrospectively reviewed clinical data of 5 MRKHS patients from 2017 to 2020. The clinical features, hormonal profiles, radiological imaging and genetic analyses were collated. The age range of the 5 patients at diagnosis was 6.7-9.1 years. Four presented with premature thelarche, and one presented with short stature. External genitalia were normal in all patients. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone stimulation tests for the 5 patients revealed peak luteinizing hormone and follicular stimulating hormone levels of 3.57, 6.24, 11.5, 4.44 and 4.97 IU/L and 9.41, 16.7, 13.8, 14.2 and 10.3 mIU/mL, respectively. Growth hormone stimulation for one patient with short stature was consistent with GHD with a peak level of GH was 7.30 ng/mL. Imaging disclosed advanced bone age in four patients and no skeletal abnormalities in any of the patients. Ultrasonography of the abdomen revealed bilateral polycystic kidneys in one patient. Pelvic magnetic resonance imaging confirmed no uterus in five patients. All of the patients had a normal karyotype (46, XX). In one patient, whole-exome sequencing detected a deletion of 17q12(chr17:36,046,434-36,105,050, hg19) encompassing the HNF1B gene. Conclusions We report the unusual co-occurrence of precocious puberty and GHD in patients with MRKHS, highlighting that abnormal puberty and growth development may represent initial unexplained manifestations. Whether the deletion of 17q 22 begat GHD is unclear.

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