Laursen E M, Juul A, Thorsteinsson S L, Høiby N, Koch C, Müller J R, Skakkebaek N E
Afdeling for vaekst og reprodukion, GR-5064, Rigshospitalet, København.
Ugeskr Laeger. 1996 Sep 16;158(38):5300-2.
Cystic fibrosis is frequently accompanied by a catabolic condition with low body mass index caused by a number of disease complications. Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is an anabolic hormone and an important marker of nutritional status, liver function and linear growth. Using radioimmunoassay we measured IGF-I once in 235 of our 240 patients (114 males, 121 females, median age 16.2 years, range 0.1-44.0 years). IGF-I was significantly reduced compared with a healthy Scandinavian control population: Mean (-2SD to +2SD) IGF-I-SD score -0.97 (-3.7 to 1.7) in males and -0.67 (-3.2 to 1.9) in females, both values were significantly different from zero (p < 0.001). Height SD score was -0.95 (-3.3 to 1.4) in males and -0.81 (-3.2 to 1.6) in females (p < 0.001). The low IGF-I concentrations may reflect the catabolic state of many patients with cystic fibrosis and play a part in their abnormal growth pattern.