Department of Paediatric Endocrinology, Child and Adolescent Medicine University Hospital, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany,
Growth Network CrescNet, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany,
Horm Res Paediatr. 2022;95(5):452-460. doi: 10.1159/000526240. Epub 2022 Jul 29.
Several studies have analyzed the association between the maximal growth hormone serum level obtained during a growth hormone stimulation test (GHMax) and the body mass index-standard deviation score (BMI-SDS). However, as sample sizes were quite small, our study aimed to analyze the association between GHMax and BMI-SDS within a large cohort of 991 children. Further, we investigated other influencing factors, like test type, age, sex, puberty, and preterm birth.
Children with short stature (height <10th percentile) received growth hormone stimulation tests with arginine or glucagon at the Department of Paediatric Endocrinology of the University of Leipzig Medical Center. The study population included a total of 1,438 tests (633 tests on girls, 805 tests on boys), with the majority consisting of prepubertal children (tests = 1,138). The mean age at testing was 7.74 years. Analyses were carried out on the entire cohort as well as stratified by test types. We performed univariate and multivariate analyses using linear mixed-effect models to assess the effects on GHMax.
GHMax and BMI-SDS were significantly negatively associated with an effect size of β = -1.10 (p < 0.001), independent from the test type. The GHMax values were significantly (p < 0.001) higher for glucagon (mean value: 9.65 ng/mL) than those for arginine tests (mean value: 8.50 ng/mL). Age, sex, premature birth, and puberty were not significantly related to GHMax values.
We confirmed the negative association between GHMax and weight status of short children found in previous studies. Therefore, considering BMI-SDS may be helpful in the assessment of growth hormone stimulation tests in short-statured children, but it should not be the determining factor for a treatment decision.
几项研究分析了生长激素刺激试验(GHMax)期间获得的最大生长激素血清水平与体重指数标准差评分(BMI-SDS)之间的关系。然而,由于样本量相当小,我们的研究旨在通过莱比锡大学医学中心儿科内分泌科的 991 名儿童的大队列来分析 GHMax 与 BMI-SDS 之间的关系。此外,我们还研究了其他影响因素,如测试类型、年龄、性别、青春期和早产。
身材矮小(身高<第 10 百分位数)的儿童在莱比锡大学医学中心儿科内分泌科接受精氨酸或胰高血糖素的生长激素刺激试验。研究人群包括总共 1438 次测试(女孩 633 次,男孩 805 次),其中大多数是青春期前的儿童(测试=1138 次)。测试时的平均年龄为 7.74 岁。我们对整个队列以及按测试类型分层的队列进行了分析。我们使用线性混合效应模型进行了单变量和多变量分析,以评估对 GHMax 的影响。
GHMax 和 BMI-SDS 与体重呈显著负相关,效应大小为β=-1.10(p<0.001),与测试类型无关。与精氨酸测试(平均值:8.50ng/mL)相比,胰高血糖素测试的 GHMax 值(平均值:9.65ng/mL)显著更高(p<0.001)。年龄、性别、早产和青春期与 GHMax 值无显著关系。
我们证实了先前研究中发现的 GHMax 与矮小儿童体重状况之间的负相关关系。因此,考虑 BMI-SDS 可能有助于评估矮小儿童的生长激素刺激试验,但不应成为治疗决策的决定因素。