PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Pre- and postdiagnosis growth failure, adult short stature, and untreated growth hormone deficiency in radiotherapy-treated long-term survivors of childhood brain tumor.

  • Julia Anttonen,
  • Tiina Remes,
  • Pekka Arikoski,
  • Päivi Lähteenmäki,
  • Mikko Arola,
  • Arja Harila-Saari,
  • Tuula Lönnqvist,
  • Tytti Pokka,
  • Pekka Riikonen,
  • Kirsti Sirkiä,
  • Heikki Rantala,
  • Marja Ojaniemi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274274
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 9
p. e0274274

Abstract

Read online

PurposeGrowth failure is common in radiotherapy-treated long-term survivors of pediatric brain tumors, but studies on longitudinal growth in this patient group are lacking. Here, the aim was to assess the changes in growth patterns before and after brain tumor diagnosis, the adult height, and the risk factors for compromised growth. The incidence and treatment practices of growth hormone deficiency were analyzed.MethodsA cohort of 73 survivors of childhood brain tumor (median age 27.2 years, range 16.2 to 43.8 years) was studied after a median follow-up period of 20.4 years from diagnosis (IQR 14.9 to 22.9 years). Patients were treated in five university hospitals in Finland between 1970 and 2008. Growth curves, final height, and patient- and disease-related risk factors for compromised growth during different growth periods were analyzed. Laboratory analyses for IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 were performed at the follow-up.ResultsGrowth failure was evident at diagnosis, with a mean height decline of -0.6 SDS (standard deviation score) from birth (95% CI -1.15 to -0.05). Mean height SDS decline after the diagnosis was -1.09 SDS (95%CI -1.51 to -0.66). At follow-up, 37% of the study subjects (27/73) had true short stature (height ConclusionLongitudinal growth impairment was common in radiotherapy-treated survivors of childhood brain tumor, resulting in compromised adult height. Loss of growth potential was evident already at diagnosis and further accelerated by the treatments. At young adulthood, unrecognized growth hormone deficiency was common.