Crofton P M, Stirling H F, Kelnar C J
Department of Paediatric Biochemistry, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh, UK.
Clin Chem. 1995 May;41(5):672-8.
We studied the temporal and quantitative relation between bone alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and height velocity in 62 short normal children as part of a prospective randomized study to compare placebo, growth hormone, oxandralone, and testosterone, singly and in combination, in promoting short-term growth acceleration and increased final height. The pretreatment cross-sectional correlation between bone ALP and height velocity was poor (P > or = 0.25), but was much higher (P = 0.0001) 3 months after treatment started. In each treatment group, there was a parallel relation between bone ALP and height velocity through time. Individual children showed a variety of growth responses over 12-42 months, but in almost all cases bone ALP paralleled height velocity. Within individual children, bone ALP was strongly correlated with 6-month height velocity (r > 0.9 in 30% of the children, r > 0.7 in 70%). We conclude that bone ALP is a useful short-term marker of growth in short normal children treated with growth hormone.