Indian Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism (Jan 2014)

Does priming with sex steroids improve the diagnosis of normal growth hormone secretion in short children?

  • Ashraf Soliman,
  • Ashraf Adel,
  • Aml Sabt,
  • Elkhansa Elbukhari,
  • Hannah Ahmed,
  • Vincenzo De Sanctis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/2230-8210.145078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 7
pp. 80 – 83

Abstract

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Introduction: There is still controversy for priming with sex steroid before growth hormone (GH) testing. Objective: We studied GH response to stimulation in 92 children >9 years with idiopathic short stature (height standard deviation score [HtSDS]-2). They were divided randomly into two groups. Children in Group 1 (n = 50) were primed with premarin in girls and testosterone in boys and those in Group 2 were not primed (n = 42). All children were tested using standard clonidine test and their serum insulin-like growth factor-I concentration (IGF-I). Additionally the growth and GH-IGF-I data of the two groups of children were compared with those for 32 short children (HtSDS 9 years. The peak GH response to clonidine provocation test did not differ before (n = 42) versus after 9 years (n = 32) of age. Conclusions: In this randomized study priming with sex steroids before GH testing did not significantly increase the yield of diagnosing short patients with normal GH secretion. In addition, GH response to provocation did not vary significantly between young (9 years) short children.

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