4.3 Article

Growth hormone dose modulation and final height in short children born small for gestational age: French real-life data

Journal

HORMONE RESEARCH IN PAEDIATRICS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000530572

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This observational study examined the long-term effects of growth hormone therapy in children born small for gestational age in France. The study found that 66.3% of children achieved normal height standard deviation score, and 24.7% reached their final adult height. Factors associated with normal height outcomes included baseline height score, age at treatment start, treatment duration, and absence of chronic disease.
IntroductionGrowth hormone (GH) therapy improves height outcomes in short children born small for gestational age (SGA); however, real-world data on long-term GH exposure are few.MethodsWe report results from an observational study (NCT01578135) including children born SGA, treated with GH at 126 sites in France and followed-up for >5 years until achieving final adult height (FAH) or until study termination. Primary endpoints were the proportion of patients with normal (>-2) height standard deviation score (SDS) at last visit and with normal FAH SDS. Post hoc analyses were performed by multivariate logistic regression analysis with stepwise elimination to identify factors associated with GH dose modulation and normal height SDS achievement.ResultsOf 1408 registered patients, a representative sample (n = 291) was selected for long-term follow-up. At last visit, 193/291 (66.3%) children achieved normal height SDS and 72/291 (24.7%) reached FAH. FAH SDS was >-2 for chronological age in 48 (66.7%) children and >-2 for adult age in 40 (55.6%) children. In the post hoc analyses, height SDS at last visit was a significant determinant of whether GH dose had been modulated. Factors significantly associated with reaching normal height SDS were baseline height SDS (taller, better), age at treatment start (younger, better), treatment duration excluding discontinuation periods (longer, better) and absence of a chronic disease. Most (70%) adverse events were non-serious, with 39% considered possibly/probably related to GH treatment.ConclusionsGH therapy was fairly effective in most short children born SGA. No new safety concerns were identified.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available