Abstract

Context: The hypothesis that obese children are overdiagnosed with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) has not been adequately investigated in the context of adiposity-related differences in auxology.Aim: To investigate the differences in auxological parameters between short, prepubertal, obese children, and normal-weight peers who underwent growth hormone stimulation testing (GHST).Hypothesis: Over-weight/obese children with GHD [peak growth hormone (GH) < 10 μg/L] will have higher values for growth velocity (GV) standard deviation score (SDS), bone age minus chronological age (BA − CA), and child height SDS minus mid-parental height (MPTH) SDS when compared to normal-weight GHD peers.Subjects and Methods: A retrospective review of anthropometric and provocative GHST data of 67 prepubertal, GH-naïve children of age 10.21 ± 2.56 years (male n = 45, age 10.8 ± 2.60 years; female n = 22, age 8.94 ± 2.10). Inclusion criteria: GHST using arginine and clonidine. Exclusion criteria: hypopituitarism, abnormal pituitary magnetic resonance imaging scan, syndromic obesity, or syndromic short stature. Data were expressed as mean ± SD.Results: The over-weight/obese children with peak GH of <10 μg/L had significantly lower value for natural log (ln) peak GH (1.45 ± 0.09 vs. 1.83 ± 0.35, p = 0.022), but similar values for GV SDS, insulin-like growth factor-I, insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3, bone age, BA − CA, MPTH, and child height SDS minus MPTH SDS compared to normal-weight peers with GHD. After adjusting for covariates, the over-weight/obese children (BMI ≥ 85th percentile) were >7 times more likely than normal-weight subjects (BMI < 85th percentile) to have a peak GH of <10 μg/L, and 23 times more likely to have a peak GH of <7 μg/L (OR = 23.3, p = 0.021). There was a significant inverse relationships between BMI SDS and the ln of peak GH (β = −0.40, r2 = 0.26, p = 0.001), but not for BMI SDS vs. GV SDS, ln peak GH vs. BA, or ln peak GH vs. GV SDS.Conclusion: Subnormal peak GH levels in obese prepubertal children are not associated with unique pre-GHST auxological characteristics.

Highlights

  • Obese children are generally taller than their non-obese peers as demonstrated in studies carried out in the United States [1], Australia [2], and Japan [3]

  • The over-weight/obese children with peak growth hormone (GH) of

  • Subnormal peak GH levels in obese prepubertal children are not associated with unique pre-GH stimulation tests (GHST) auxological characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

Obese children are generally taller than their non-obese peers as demonstrated in studies carried out in the United States [1], Australia [2], and Japan [3]. Studies that evaluated the relationship between obesity and the diagnostic tests for growth hormone (GH) deficiency (GHD), the GH stimulation tests (GHST), had suggested that obese children have subnormal peak GH response to GH secretagogues [5, 6] This has led to the hypothesis that obese children are overdiagnosed with GHD [5,6,7], which suggests a high prevalence of false-positive results in obese children diagnosed with GHD. Such a study may provide additional data to reduce the rate of false-positive results from GHST, and improve the accuracy of the diagnosis of GHD given that the current diagnostic gold standard for GH deficiency, the GHST, has several drawbacks www.frontiersin.org

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