Frontiers in Endocrinology (Sep 2019)

Diagnosis of Idiopathic GHD in Children Based on Response to rhGH Treatment: The Importance of GH Provocative Tests and IGF-1

  • João Soares Felício,
  • Luísa Corrêa Janaú,
  • Marcelle Alves Moraes,
  • Nathalie Abdallah Zahalan,
  • Fabrício de Souza Resende,
  • Manuela Nascimento de Lemos,
  • Norberto Jorge Kzan de Souza Neto,
  • Isabela Imbelloni Farias de Franco,
  • Loyane Tamyres Costa Leitão,
  • Lilian de Souza d'Albuquerque Silva,
  • Maria Clara Neres Iunes de Oliveira,
  • Angélica Leite de Alcântara,
  • Ana Carolina Contente Braga de Souza,
  • Wanderson Maia da Silva,
  • Márcia Costa dos Santos,
  • Natércia Neves Marques de Queiroz,
  • Lorena Vilhena de Moraes,
  • Antônio Bentes de Figueiredo,
  • Ana Luiza Prieto Farinassi,
  • Luciana Marques da Costa Farias,
  • Danielle Dias da Silva,
  • Karem Miléo Felício,
  • João Felício Abrahão Neto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2019.00638
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Purpose: Serum IGF-1 (Insulin like growth factor 1) and Growth Hormone (GH) provocative tests are reasonable tools for screening and diagnosis of idiopathic GH Deficiency (IGHD). However, the average cut-off points applied on these tests have a lower level of evidence and produce large amounts of false results. The aim of this study is to evaluate the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of IGF-1 and GH stimulation tests as diagnostic tools for IGHD, using clinical response to recombinant human GH (rhGH) treatment as diagnostic standard [increase of at least 0.3 in height standard deviation (H-SD) in 1 year].Methods: We performed a prospective study with 115 children and adolescents presenting short stature (SS), without secondary SS etiologies such as organic lesions, genetic syndromes, thyroid disorders. They were separated into Group 1 [patients with familial SS or constitutional delay of growth and puberty (CDGP), not treated with rhGH], Group 2 (patients with suspicion of IGHD with clinical response to rhGH treatment), and Group 3 (patients with suspicion of IGHD without growth response to rhGH treatment). Then, they were assessed for diagnostic performance of IGF-1, Insulin Tolerance Test (ITT) and clonidine test (CT) alone and combined at different cut-off points.Results: Based on the ROC curve, the best cut-off points found for IGF-1, ITT, and CT when they were used isolated were −0.492 SDS (sensitivity: 50%; specificity: 53.8%; accuracy: 46.5%), 4.515 μg/L (sensitivity: 75.5%; specificity: 45.5%; accuracy: 52.7%), and 4.095 μg/L (sensitivity: 54.5%; specificity: 52.6%; accuracy: 56.9%), respectively. When we had combined IGF-1 with−2SD as cut-off alongside ITT or CT, we found 7 μg/L as the best cut-off point. In this situation, ITT had sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of 93.9, 81.8, and 90.1%, while CT had 93.2, 68.4, and 85.7%, respectively.Conclusion: Our data suggest that diagnosis of IGHD should be established based on a combination of clinical expertise, auxologic, radiologic, and laboratorial data, using IGF-1 at the −2SD threshold combined, with ITT or CT at the cut-off point of 7 μg/L. Additional studies, similar to ours, are imperative to establish cut-off points based on therapeutic response to rhGH in IGHD, which would be directly related to a better treatment outcome.

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