Efficacy and safety of one year of growth hormone therapy in steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome - 11/09/11
Abstract |
Objectives: To study the efficacy and safety of 1 year of growth hormone (GH) therapy in children with steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome.
Study design: A prospective pilot, open study in which GH (mean dose 0.32 mg/kg per week) was administered for 1 year to 8 children with steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome requiring prednisolone (mean dose 0.46 mg/kg per day) to maintain remission. Steroid dependence was defined as recurrence of proteinuria within 2 weeks of discontinuation of prednisolone, or when the dose was lowered below a critical level. At entry, all patients had been steroid dependent for at least 1 year. Anthropometric and bone mineral density measurements after treatment were compared with 1-year pretreatment data.
Results: Pretreatment mean (±SD) chronologic age was 12.6 (±3.1) years, with a mean bone age of 9.1 (±2.0) years, with delayed puberty in five patients. The mean height velocity increased from 3.7 (±1.4) to 9.4 (±2.1) cm/yr after 1 year of treatment (p<0.05). The mean height standard deviation score increased from −1.4 (±1.6) to −0.3 (±1.1), (p<0.05). In the spine, the mean bone mineral density increased from 0.50 to 0.64 gm/cm2 (p<0.05), and in the femoral neck, from 0.55 to 0.64 gm/cm2 (p<0.05) after 1 year of treatment. Mean lean body mass increased from 58.1% to 62.6% (p<0.01). There were no significant changes in creatinine clearance, fasting glucose, fasting insulin, or glycosylated hemoglobin levels. The mean bone age increased to 11.4 (±2.4) years, and pubertal stage advanced in 2 patients.
Conclusion: One year of GH therapy is effective in improving the height standard deviation score, height velocity, bone mineral density, and lean body mass of children with steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome. There were no significant adverse effects. However, the bone age accelerated at a greater pace than the height age, and further studies are required to define the role of GH therapy in steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : BMD, GH, Ht SDS, SDNS
Plan
* | Supported in part by grants GR 06095M and RP900311, from the National University of Singapore (K.O.L, H.K.Y.), and by Novo Nordisk, Asia Pacific Centre, Singapore. |
Vol 130 - N° 5
P. 793-799 - mai 1997 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?