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High‐dose growth hormone (GH) treatment in prepubertal GH‐deficient children
Author(s) -
Yokoya S,
Araki K,
Igarashi Y,
Kohno H,
Nishi Y,
Hasegawa Y,
Fujita K,
Iwatani N,
Tachibana K,
Ohyama Y,
Seino Y,
Satoh M,
Fujieda K,
Tanaka T
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
acta pædiatrica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1651-2227
pISSN - 0803-5253
DOI - 10.1111/j.1651-2227.1999.tb14357.x
Subject(s) - medicine , bone age , growth hormone , endocrinology , growth velocity , growth hormone treatment , hormone
Yokoya S, Araki K, Igarashi Y, Kohno H, Nishi Y, Hasegawa Y, Fujita K, Iwatani N, Tachibana K, Ohyama Y, Seino Y, Satoh M, Fujieda K, Tanaka T. High‐dose growth hormone (GH) treatment in prepubertal GH‐deficient children. Acta Pædiatr 1999; Suppl 428: 76–9. Stockholm. ISSN 0803–5326 Two clinical studies were conducted to determine the effect of different doses of growth hormone (GH) on prepubertal growth in GH‐deficient boys. In one study, GH doses of 1.0 and 1.5 IU/kg/week (0.33 and 0.5 mg/kg/week) were given to groups of five children and compared with a conventional Japanese dose of 0.5 IU/kg/week (0.17 mg/kg/week) in 15 children. A significant dose‐dependent increase in height velocity occurred in the first year of treatment, but differences between doses were not significant thereafter. In a second study, GH was administered to ten boys at a dose of 0.5 IU/kg/week for the first year, 0.75 IU/kg/week for the second year, 1.0 IU/kg/week for the third year and 0.5 IU/kg/week for the fourth and subsequent years (0.17, 0.25, 0.33 and 0.17 mg/kg/week, respectively). During the second and third years of GH treatment, these boys had significantly higher growth rates than controls, who were given GH at 0.5 IU/kg/week (0.17 mg/kg/week) throughout, indicating successful reduction in‘waning’of the treatment effect. At the end of the fourth year, the different protocols from the two studies had both resulted in a greater height SDS than the controls, and did not advance bone maturation. In conclusion, these protocols may be effective in increasing prepubertal height gain in children with GH deficiency. □ Growth hormone, growth hormone deficiency, high dose