Moore W V, Moore K C, Gifford R, Hollowell J G, Donaldson D L
Department of Pediatrics, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City 66103.
J Pediatr. 1992 May;120(5):702-8. doi: 10.1016/s0022-3476(05)80231-8.
Children with short stature but normal growth rate and/or normal growth hormone response to sleep and secretagogues were treated with recombinant methionyl human growth hormone, 0.3 mg/kg per week. In each year of treatment, about 80% of the subjects maintained an increase in growth rate greater than the defined limit (greater than 1 cm/yr above pretreatment growth rate) for continuation of human growth hormone treatment. Comparison of the group that continued to respond to human growth hormone with the group that did not maintain an accelerated growth rate did not reveal differences in bone age delay, sleep or secretagogue-stimulated human growth hormone secretion, degree of short stature either absolute or relative to target height, and somatomedin C concentration before or after initiation of therapy. The group that failed to respond to the human growth hormone treatment in the first year of treatment was younger and had a higher pretreatment growth rate. Review of the longitudinal growth curves revealed five patterns of response to human growth hormone treatment: (1) failure to increase growth rate in two subjects with height SD scores within 1 SD of target height, (2) failure to increase growth rate in five subjects with height SD scores greater than 1 SD less than the target height, (3) acceleration in growth rate in three subjects that was not maintained until achievement of a height within 1 SD of the target height, (4) acceleration of growth rate in five subjects that was maintained until achievement of a height within 1 SD of the target height, and (5) acceleration in growth rate that was maintained during the 3 years of treatment in 15 subjects who had not attained a height within 1 SD of the target height. We conclude that human growth hormone treatment of some but not all short children with "normal" growth hormone secretion will result in sustained acceleration of growth rate and attainment of prepubertal heights that are closer to but do not exceed their genetic height potential. A clinical trial of human growth hormone may be necessary to determine which subjects will benefit from the treatment.
身材矮小但生长速率正常和/或对睡眠及促分泌素的生长激素反应正常的儿童,接受重组甲硫氨酰人生长激素治疗,每周0.3毫克/千克。在治疗的每一年,约80%的受试者生长速率的增加维持在大于规定限度(比治疗前生长速率每年高出1厘米以上),从而得以继续接受人生长激素治疗。将继续对人生长激素有反应的组与未维持加速生长速率的组进行比较,未发现两组在骨龄延迟、睡眠或促分泌素刺激的人生长激素分泌、绝对或相对于靶身高的身材矮小程度以及治疗开始前后的生长调节素C浓度方面存在差异。在治疗第一年对人生长激素治疗无反应的组年龄较小,治疗前生长速率较高。回顾纵向生长曲线发现了对人生长激素治疗的五种反应模式:(1)两名身高标准差分数在靶身高1个标准差范围内的受试者生长速率未增加;(2)五名身高标准差分数比靶身高低1个标准差以上的受试者生长速率未增加;(3)三名受试者生长速率加速,但在达到靶身高1个标准差范围内的身高之前未维持;(4)五名受试者生长速率加速并维持到达到靶身高1个标准差范围内的身高;(5)15名未达到靶身高1个标准差范围内身高的受试者在3年治疗期间生长速率持续加速。我们得出结论,对一些但并非所有生长激素分泌“正常”的矮小儿童进行人生长激素治疗,将导致生长速率持续加速,并达到更接近但不超过其遗传身高潜力的青春期前身高。可能需要进行人生长激素的临床试验,以确定哪些受试者将从治疗中获益。