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Consider Early Treatment for Turner Syndrome


 

Early treatment with growth hormone can correct growth failure in infants and toddlers with Turner syndrome, allowing many of them to achieve normal height within a few years, Dr. Marsha Davenport and her colleagues reported.

In their randomized placebo-controlled trial, 93% of the girls who received growth hormone achieved a height within normal range before they were 6 years old. The success rate is probably related to early intervention, reported Dr. Davenport, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and her associates. “In general, the younger the patient is at growth hormone initiation, the smaller the height deficit to be bridged and the faster height is normalized” (J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 2007;92:3406–16).

Dr. Paul Kaplowitz, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics section on endocrinology, expressed some concern about the difficulty of daily injections for such young children.

The investigators randomized 88 girls (mean age 2 years; range 9 months to 4 years) to either no intervention or to 2 years of daily injections with recombinant growth hormone (50 mcg/kg).

At baseline, the mean length/height standard deviation score (SDS) was −1.6. Chronologic age and bone age were not significantly different in any of the girls. Fifty-six had a 45,X karyotype; 14 had a 45,X/46,XX karyotype; and 18 had a variety of other karyotypes.

Compliance with growth hormone treatment was very good, with patients receiving an average of 95% of their scheduled injections.

Treatment corrected growth failure and promoted catch-up growth. In the treatment group, height increased from a baseline SDS of −1.4 to −0.3 at year 2. The control group continued to experience growth failure, falling from a height SDS of −1.8 at baseline to −2.2 by the second year.

During the 2-year study, girls who took growth hormone grew an average of 20.4 cm, compared with an average 13.6 cm in the control group, a significant difference.

The effect of growth hormone was rapid, the investigators noted; by 4 months, the height difference between the groups became significant. In the first year, girls taking growth hormone grew significantly more than those in the control group (11.7 cm vs. 8 cm). The difference was smaller, but still significant, in the second year of treatment (8.4 cm vs. 5.5 cm).

Bone age and chronologic age were similar in both groups at baseline, but by the end of the study, girls in the growth hormone group experienced a small advance in bone age, compared with chronologic age, whereas bone age had fallen behind in the control group.

Karyotype did not significantly affect response to growth hormone. There were no significant safety concerns; none of the adverse events were deemed related to the study medication.

There are probably few, if any, safety issues with giving growth hormone to girls of this age, Dr. Kaplowitz commented in an interview. Instead, he expressed some trepidation about problems giving daily injections to such young children.

“I would not be concerned about safety since there is ample data on that for older girls and there is no reason to think younger girls would be different,” said Dr. Kaplowitz, chief of endocrinology at the Children's National Medical Center, Washington, D.C. “The results show clearly that [growth hormone] is safe and effective for girls with Turner syndrome who are between 9 months and 4 years old. My concern is that a lot of kids and their parents are not psychologically ready for daily injections at this age.”

Some girls with Turner syndrome display anxiety and agitation that makes even routine office exams difficult for the physician and traumatic for the child. “I would not want those parents to have to fight with these girls to give them daily injections until they are considerably older and more cooperative.”

Waiting until 9 years or older to start growth hormone injections “clearly is not optimal,” Dr. Kaplowitz said. “But the study does not prove that results of starting at 2–4 years old are much better than starting at 5–6 years old.”

Parents shouldn't feel pressured to start treatment until the child is falling considerably behind on her growth curve, he added.

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