Treatment of short normal children with growth hormone--a cautionary tale?
- PMID: 1978161
- DOI: 10.1016/0140-6736(90)92891-k
Treatment of short normal children with growth hormone--a cautionary tale?
Abstract
41 short normal children were randomly allocated either to daily injections of growth hormone (rhGH) at 30 IU/m2 per week or to no treatment. 6 months of rhGH therapy produced up to 76% loss of fat mass and up to 25% increase in lean body mass (LBM). These changes were significantly different from those in the untreated group. LBM was the main determinant of resting energy expenditure (REE) expressed as kJ/24 h. REE expressed as kJ/kg LBM per 24 h correlated negatively with height, which was responsible for 66% of the variance in REE kJ/kg LBM per 24 h. Short children therefore expend more energy than tall children in fulfilling basic metabolic needs. After 6 months REE kJ/24 h increased significantly in treated children. However, treated children did not differ significantly from untreated children in REE kJ/kg LBM per 24 h. rhGH does not therefore seem to have a specific effect upon REE. The possibility that rhGH produces profound metabolic effects should limit its use in otherwise healthy children until the mechanism of action is more clearly elucidated.
Comment in
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Safety of growth hormone.Lancet. 1991 Jan 12;337(8733):108-10. Lancet. 1991. PMID: 1670691 No abstract available.
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