Abstract
Isolated idiopathic growth hormone deficiency (GHD) and idiopathic short stature (ISS) can be difficult to distinguish, but the therapeutical consequences are different. In this report the data on final height of untreated and treated children with GHD and ISS are reviewed. Untreated GH-deficient individuals who underwent spontaneous puberty (22 male, 14 female patients) reached a mean final height of 4.7 SD (range 3.9 to 6.0) below the population's mean. If puberty was induced (19 male patients), mean final height SD score (SDS) was -3.1. Traditional regimens of GH administration (2-4 injections/wk) in 236 children (184 boys, 52 girls) with GHD and spontaneous puberty resulted in a final height SDS of -2.8 (range -1.5 to -4.7). In 190 children in whom puberty was induced (139 boys, 51 girls) mean final height was -1.6 (range - -1.1 to -2.4). The mean gain in final height SDS is therefore estimated at 1.5-2.0 in average cases, and 3.5 in extreme cases. Preliminary data suggest that on present regimens mean final height may approach target height. In untreated boys with ISS the mean final height was 2-5 cm lower than that predicted before puberty, whereas in girls it was almost equal to the prediction. After GH treatment the mean final height was 0.4-3.0 cm higher than the predicted adult height, which results in an average net gain in final height SDS of approximately 0.5-0.8 (3-5 cm).
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