Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2803695 Growth Hormone & IGF Research 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Background/aimsGirls with Turner syndrome (TS) have short stature and benefit from growth hormone therapy (hGH). Some TS present a significant change in height velocity in response to hGH while others have only a mild increment. Our objective was to correlate the response to hGH (height velocity after 6 months of therapy) to biochemical data prior to and after the beginning of hGH to try to define a tool to predict the response to hGH.MethodsThirteen TS participated in the study (ages 3.5–14 years). Levels of IGF-I and IGFBP-3 were measured before and 5, 30 and 90 days after starting hGH (0.05 mg/kg/day), ALS levels were measured only prior and after 5 days.ResultsThe mean height velocity (±SD) increased from 4.27 (±1.18) cm/year to 8.46 (±2.17) cm/year (p = 0.0001).There was no correlation between the height velocity encountered and the expected height velocity using published mathematical models. Basal ALS values correlated to height velocity SDS and IGF-I and IGFBP-3, after 90 days, correlated to height velocity. Most of the data was too scattered to be used individually for each patient.ConclusionsEven though we observed a relationship between biochemical markers and height velocity in TS treated with hGH, the response to hGH therapy in this condition is highly variable.

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