AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to examine children initially diagnosed with isolated growth hormone deficiency (IGHD) to see who later developed multiple pituitary hormone deficiencies (MPHD), analyzing data from 716 growth hormone-treated kids in a multinational study.* -
  • Results showed that 9.9% of children developed MPHD, with the rate increasing to 20.7% in those followed for over 4 years; thyroid-stimulating hormone and gonadotropins were the most commonly affected hormones.* -
  • The development of MPHD was more likely in those with severe IGHD, especially if they had a history of intracranial tumors or genetic mutations, and factors like female gender, older age, and longer follow-up were

Article Abstract

Objective: To determine characteristics of children initially diagnosed with isolated growth hormone deficiency (IGHD) of organic aetiology, who later developed multiple pituitary hormone deficiencies (MPHD).

Design: Data were analysed for 716 growth hormone-treated children with organic IGHD, who were growth hormone-naïve at baseline in the multinational, observational Genetics and Neuroendocrinology of Short Stature International Study.

Methods: Development of MPHD was ascertained from investigator-provided diagnoses, adverse events and concomitant medications. Analyses were performed for all patients and separately for those who developed MPHD within 4.5 years or had >3.5 years follow-up and continued to have IGHD (4-year cohort).

Results: MPHD developed in 71/716 (9.9%) children overall, and in 60/290 (20.7%) in the 4-year cohort. The most frequent additional deficiencies were thyroid-stimulating hormone (47 patients) and gonadotropins (23 patients). Compared with those who remained with IGHD, children who developed MPHD had more severe GHD at study entry, significantly lower baseline insulin-like growth factor1, peak stimulated growth hormone, and more frequent diagnosis of intracranial tumour or mutation of gene(s) controlling hypothalamic-pituitary development and/or function. Multivariate logistic regression analyses identified female gender, longer follow-up, higher baseline age and lower peak stimulated growth hormone as predictors of MPHD development.

Conclusions: MPHD is more likely to develop in patients with severe organic IGHD, especially those with history of intracranial tumour or mutation of gene(s) controlling hypothalamic-pituitary development and/or function. Older baseline age, female gender and longer follow-up duration were also associated with higher incidence of MPHD. Long-term monitoring of pituitary function is recommended, irrespective of the aetiology of GHD.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EJE-15-1203DOI Listing

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