Rosenbloom Arlan L
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab. 2008 Apr;21(4):301-15. doi: 10.1515/jpem.2008.21.4.301.
The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of subcutaneously injected rhIGF-I in late 2005 for treatment of children with severe short stature from growth hormone (GH) insensitivity due to genetic defects in the GH receptor or postreceptor mechanisms or from the development of GH inactivating antibodies. The approval was based on 15 years experience treating these rare conditions with rhIGF-I. Because of the very small numbers of children with these conditions, there has been an effort to justify and promote broader use for rhIGF-I. Attempts to identify GH unresponsiveness in children with idiopathic short stature (ISS) have yielded only a handful of patients with rare genetic disorders. IGF-I treatment for unequivocal GH insensitivity improves but does not correct growth failure, in contrast to the typical experience with GH replacement of GH deficiency. This emphasizes the importance of direct effects of GH at the growth plate, including the stimulation of maturation of cartilage precursor cells and local production of IGF-I, effects that cannot be duplicated by exogenous administration of rhIGF-I. Adverse effects testify to the more than adequate delivery of administered rhIGF-I to other tissues; these include lymphoid hyperplasia, coarsening of the facies, and increased percentage body fat. The absence of convincing evidence of GH insensitivity in a substantial number of children with ISS, the limited ability of endocrine IGF-I to restore normal growth in those with unequivocal GH unresponsiveness, the suppression of endogenous GH (and thereby, local GH effects on growth) that occurs with IGF-I administration, the risk profile, and the absence of data on efficacy in other than proven severe GH insensitivity, led the Drug and Therapeutics Committee of the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society to conclude that rhIGF-I use is only justified in conditions approved by the FDA and that other growth promotional use should only be investigational. Nonetheless, substantial numbers of children are being treated with rhIGF-I off-label, exuberant estimates of potentially eligible patients are projected, and several uncontrolled clinical trials have been undertaken which are not based on sound preliminary data or established growth principles, and a single four-arm study begun comparing monotherapy with rhGH to combination rhGH with three dosages of rhIGF-I as a single daily injection, a means of administration of rhIGF-I that has not been tested.
2005年末,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准皮下注射重组人胰岛素样生长因子-I(rhIGF-I)用于治疗因生长激素(GH)受体或受体后机制的基因缺陷或GH失活抗体的产生而导致严重身材矮小的儿童。该批准基于15年来使用rhIGF-I治疗这些罕见病症的经验。由于患有这些病症的儿童数量极少,人们一直在努力为rhIGF-I的更广泛应用寻找依据并加以推广。在特发性矮小(ISS)儿童中试图确定GH无反应性的尝试仅发现了少数患有罕见遗传疾病的患者。与典型的GH替代治疗GH缺乏症的经验相比,IGF-I治疗明确的GH无反应性可改善但不能纠正生长失败。这强调了GH在生长板处的直接作用的重要性,包括刺激软骨前体细胞的成熟和局部产生IGF-I,这些作用无法通过外源性给予rhIGF-I来复制。不良反应证明给予的rhIGF-I已充分输送到其他组织;这些不良反应包括淋巴组织增生、面容粗糙和体脂百分比增加。在大量ISS儿童中缺乏令人信服的GH无反应性证据,内分泌IGF-I在明确的GH无反应性儿童中恢复正常生长的能力有限,IGF-I给药会抑制内源性GH(从而抑制局部GH对生长的作用),风险状况以及除已证实的严重GH无反应性之外缺乏疗效数据,导致劳森·威尔金斯儿科内分泌学会药物与治疗委员会得出结论,rhIGF-I仅在FDA批准的情况下使用才合理,其他促进生长的用途仅应作为研究性用途。尽管如此,仍有大量儿童在接受rhIGF-I的非标签治疗,预计潜在符合条件的患者数量会过高,并且已经进行了几项非对照临床试验,这些试验并非基于可靠的初步数据或既定的生长原则,并且开始了一项单组四臂研究,比较rhGH单药治疗与rhGH联合三种剂量rhIGF-I每日一次注射的疗效,而rhIGF-I的这种给药方式尚未经过测试。