Abstract

Disclosure: J. Vliegenthart: None. J. Wit: None. B. Bakker: None. A. Boot: None. C. de Bruin: None. M. Finken: None. J.V. Heyden: None. M. Houdijk: None. H. van der Kamp: None. E. Van Mil: None. A. Reedijk: None. T. Sas: None. D.A. Schott: None. P. van Setten: None. S. Straetemans: None. V. van Tellingen: None. B. Touwslager: None. A.V. Trotsenburg: None. P. voorhoeve: None. A.C. Hokken-Koelega: None. D.C. van der Kaay: None.

Background: The majority of children diagnosed with idiopathic isolated growth hormone deficiency (IIGHD) show a normal growth hormone (GH) secretion (assessed by GH stimulation tests) when retested at near adult height (NAH). It appears plausible that, if normal stimulated GH secretion is observed in mid-puberty, continuing recombinant human GH (rhGH) treatment may only have a minor effect on NAH. The effect on NAH has never been investigated in a prospective study. Aim: To evaluate patient preference in the choice to (dis-)continue GH treatment from mid-puberty, and to study whether patients who discontinued treatment differed in baseline characteristics from those who continued treatment. Methods: The study population consisted of adolescents who were diagnosed in childhood with IIGHD (GH peak at diagnosis between 1.7 ug/L and 10 ug/L) and who had started rhGH therapy between 2005-2018. According to the national treatment protocol, GH secretion was retested in mid-puberty (males: Tanner stage G3/4, testicular volume >12 ml and bone age (BA) 13-16 years; females: Tanner stage B3/4 and BA 11-14 years). In this multicentre prospective patient-preference design study, adolescents who tested GH sufficient at mid-puberty (GH peak >6.7 ug/L) had the choice to discontinue or continue rhGH treatment until NAH (height velocity <2cm/year). Results: In total 127 patients (95 male, 75%) participated in this study. Forty-four patients (35%) chose to continue GH treatment until NAH (group 1), and 83 patients (65%) chose to discontinue GH treatment (group 2). Mean height at inclusion (group 1: -0.76±0.69 SDS vs group 2: -0.47±0.85 SDS; P=0.055), target height SDS (group 1: -0.73±0.54 SDS and -0.58±0.53 SDS, P=0.15) and age at inclusion (group 1: 14.0±1.1y and 13.9±1.1y, P=0.69) did not significantly differ between groups. Males and females did not differ in these characteristics. Currently, 109 patients (86%) have reached NAH. Conclusions: The majority of patients (65%) preferred to discontinue rhGH treatment after sufficient GH retesting in mid-puberty. An anticipated difference in baseline data between the groups (adolescents who choose to discontinue treatment may be taller and older) could not be confirmed. Data are being collected until all patients reach near adult height.

Presentation: 6/3/2024

Details

Title
9262 Withdrawing Growth Hormone Treatment at Mid-Puberty in Idiopathic Isolated Growth Hormone Deficiency: Baseline Characteristics in Patient-Preference Design Study
Author
Vliegenthart, Joeri 1 ; Jan-Maarten Wit 2 ; Bakker, Boudewijn 3 ; Boot, Annemieke 4 ; de Bruin, Christiaan 2 ; Finken, Martijn 5 ; van der Heyden, Josefine 6 ; Houdijk, Mieke 7 ; van der Kamp, Hetty 3 ; Edgar Van Mil 8 ; Reedijk, Ardine 9 ; Sas, Theo 1 ; Schott, Dina Antina 10 ; Petra van Setten 11 ; Straetemans, Saartje 12 ; Vera van Tellingen 13 ; Touwslager, Bob 14 ; A S Paul van Trotsenburg 15 ; voorhoeve, Paul 16 ; Hokken-Koelega, Anita C S 1 ; Danielle C M van der Kaay 1 

 Erasmus University Medical Center , Rotterdam , Netherlands 
 Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden , Netherlands 
 Wilhelmina Children's Hospital , Utrecht , Netherlands 
 University Medical Center Groningen , Groningen , Netherlands 
 Amsterdam University Medical Center , Amsterdam , Netherlands 
 Sint Franciscus Gasthuis , Rotterdam , Netherlands 
 Hagaziekenhuis, 's-Gravenhage , Netherlands 
 Jeroen Bosch Hospital , S Hertogenbosch , Netherlands 
 Dutch Growth Research Foundation , Rotterdam , Netherlands 
10  Zuyderland Medical Centre , Maastricht , Netherlands 
11  Radboud University Medical Center , Nijmegen , Netherlands 
12  Maastricht University Medical Center , Maastricht , Netherlands 
13  Catharina Hospital , Eindhoven , Netherlands 
14  Antonius Hospital , Nieuwegein , Netherlands 
15  Emma Children's Hospital , Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam , Netherlands 
16  Canisius Wilhelmina Hospital , Nijmegen , Netherlands 
Publication year
2024
Publication date
Oct-Nov 2024
Publisher
Oxford University Press
e-ISSN
24721972
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3170203655
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.