Introduction: Phase 3 trial of 6-month subcutaneous leuprolide acetate (SC-LA) in children with central precocious puberty (CPP) demonstrated efficacy and safety. The aims of this secondary analysis were to evaluate unstimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) as efficacy measure, assess clinical suppression metrics, and present biochemical and clinical data for subgroups not achieving hormone suppression.
Methods: Sixty-two children with treatment-naïve CPP received 2 doses of 45 mg SC-LA at 24-week intervals.
Background/objective: The main objective of this study is to evaluate the incremental cost-effectiveness (ICER) of the Cambridge hybrid closed-loop automated insulin delivery (AID) algorithm versus usual care for children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D).
Methods: This multicenter, binational, parallel-controlled trial randomized 133 insulin pump using participants aged 6 to 18 years to either AID (n = 65) or usual care (n = 68) for 6 months. Both within-trial and lifetime cost-effectiveness were analyzed.
Context: The assessment and treatment of children with growth retardation is increasingly complex, and due to availability of targeted genetic sequencing, an ever-expanding number of conditions impeding growth are being identified. Among endocrine-related etiologies of short stature amenable to hormonal treatment, defects in the growth hormone (GH)-insulin-like growth factor I axis remain pre-eminent, with a multiplicity of disorders causing decreased secretion or insensitivity to GH action. Sex steroids in puberty increase epiphyseal senescence and eventual growth plate closure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Treatment options for central precocious puberty (CPP) are important for individualization of therapy.
Objective: We evaluated the efficacy and safety of 6-month 45-mg leuprolide acetate (LA) depot with intramuscular administration.
Methods: LA depot was administered at weeks 0 and 24 to treatment-naïve (n = 27) or previously treated (n = 18) children with CPP in a phase 3, multicenter, single-arm, open-label study (NCT03695237).
Objective: We evaluated the performance of the iLet bionic pancreas (BP) in non-Hispanic White individuals (here referred to as "Whites") and in Black, Hispanic, and other individuals (here collectively referred to as "Minorities").
Research Design And Methods: A multicenter, randomized controlled trial evaluated glycemic management with the BP versus standard of care (SC) in 161 adult and 165 pediatric participants with type 1 diabetes over 13 weeks.
Results: In Whites (n = 240), the mean baseline-adjusted difference in 13-week HbA1c between the BP and SC groups was -0.