A randomised controlled trial evaluating IGF-I titration in contrast to current GH dosing strategies in children born Small for Gestational Age (NESGAS).
(2014) In European Journal of Endocrinology 171(4). p.509-518- Abstract
- Background: Short children born small for gestational age (SGA) are treated with growth hormone (GH) dose based on body size, but treatment may lead to high levels of IGF-I. The objective was to evaluate IGF-I titration of GH dose in contrast to current dosing strategies. Methods: In the North European Small for gestational age study (NESGAS) 92 short pre-pubertal children born SGA were randomised after one year of high dose GH treatment (67µg/kg/day) to three different regimens: high-dose (67µg/kg/day), low-dose (35µg/kg/day) or IGF-I titration. Results: The average dose during the second year of the randomised trial did not differ between the IGF-I titration group (38µg/kg/day, SD 0.019) and the low-dose group (35µg/kg/day, SD 0.002)... (More)
- Background: Short children born small for gestational age (SGA) are treated with growth hormone (GH) dose based on body size, but treatment may lead to high levels of IGF-I. The objective was to evaluate IGF-I titration of GH dose in contrast to current dosing strategies. Methods: In the North European Small for gestational age study (NESGAS) 92 short pre-pubertal children born SGA were randomised after one year of high dose GH treatment (67µg/kg/day) to three different regimens: high-dose (67µg/kg/day), low-dose (35µg/kg/day) or IGF-I titration. Results: The average dose during the second year of the randomised trial did not differ between the IGF-I titration group (38µg/kg/day, SD 0.019) and the low-dose group (35µg/kg/day, SD 0.002) (P=0•46), but there was a wide variation in the IGF-I titration group (range 10-80µg/kg/day). The IGF-I titration group had significantly lower height gain (0.17SDS, SD 0.18) during the second year of the randomised trial compared to the high-dose group (0.46SDS, SD 0.25) but not significantly lower than the low-dose group (0.23SDS, SD 0.15) (p=0.17). The IGF-I titration group had lower IGF-I levels after two years of the trial (mean 1.16, SD 1.24) compared to both the low-dose (mean 1.76, SD 1.48) and the high-dose (mean 2.97, SD 1.63) groups. Conclusion: IGF-I titration of GH dose in SGA children proved less effective than current dosing strategies. IGF-I titration resulted in physiological IGF-I levels with a wide range of GH dose and a poorer growth response, which indicates the role of IGF-I resistance and highlights the heterogeneity of short SGA children. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4615800
- author
- organization
- publishing date
- 2014
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- European Journal of Endocrinology
- volume
- 171
- issue
- 4
- pages
- 509 - 518
- publisher
- Society of the European Journal of Endocrinology
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:25080293
- wos:000343671500016
- scopus:84907207473
- ISSN
- 1479-683X
- DOI
- 10.1530/EJE-14-0419
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 0b59b57c-4070-45cc-98ab-71edbf3ad875 (old id 4615800)
- alternative location
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25080293?dopt=Abstract
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 09:56:47
- date last changed
- 2022-04-04 00:48:44
@article{0b59b57c-4070-45cc-98ab-71edbf3ad875, abstract = {{Background: Short children born small for gestational age (SGA) are treated with growth hormone (GH) dose based on body size, but treatment may lead to high levels of IGF-I. The objective was to evaluate IGF-I titration of GH dose in contrast to current dosing strategies. Methods: In the North European Small for gestational age study (NESGAS) 92 short pre-pubertal children born SGA were randomised after one year of high dose GH treatment (67µg/kg/day) to three different regimens: high-dose (67µg/kg/day), low-dose (35µg/kg/day) or IGF-I titration. Results: The average dose during the second year of the randomised trial did not differ between the IGF-I titration group (38µg/kg/day, SD 0.019) and the low-dose group (35µg/kg/day, SD 0.002) (P=0•46), but there was a wide variation in the IGF-I titration group (range 10-80µg/kg/day). The IGF-I titration group had significantly lower height gain (0.17SDS, SD 0.18) during the second year of the randomised trial compared to the high-dose group (0.46SDS, SD 0.25) but not significantly lower than the low-dose group (0.23SDS, SD 0.15) (p=0.17). The IGF-I titration group had lower IGF-I levels after two years of the trial (mean 1.16, SD 1.24) compared to both the low-dose (mean 1.76, SD 1.48) and the high-dose (mean 2.97, SD 1.63) groups. Conclusion: IGF-I titration of GH dose in SGA children proved less effective than current dosing strategies. IGF-I titration resulted in physiological IGF-I levels with a wide range of GH dose and a poorer growth response, which indicates the role of IGF-I resistance and highlights the heterogeneity of short SGA children.}}, author = {{Jensen, Rikke Beck and Thankamony, Ajay and O'Connell, Susan M and Kirk, Jeremy M W and Donaldson, Malcolm and Ivarsson, Sten and Soder, Olle and Roche, Edna and Hoey, Hilary and Dunger, David P and Juul, Anders}}, issn = {{1479-683X}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{509--518}}, publisher = {{Society of the European Journal of Endocrinology}}, series = {{European Journal of Endocrinology}}, title = {{A randomised controlled trial evaluating IGF-I titration in contrast to current GH dosing strategies in children born Small for Gestational Age (NESGAS).}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EJE-14-0419}}, doi = {{10.1530/EJE-14-0419}}, volume = {{171}}, year = {{2014}}, }