Characteristics of Growth in Children With Classic Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia due to 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency During Adrenarche and Beyond

Patients with classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) often do not achieve their full growth potential. Adrenarche may accelerate bone maturation and thereby result in decreased growth in CAH. The study aimed to analyze the impact of growth during adrenarche on final height of adequately treate...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism 2022-01, Vol.107 (2), p.e487-e499
Hauptverfasser: Troger, Tobias, Sommer, Grit, Lang-Muritano, Mariarosaria, Konrad, Daniel, Kuhlmann, Beatrice, Zumsteg, Urs, Flück, Christa E
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container_issue 2
container_start_page e487
container_title The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
container_volume 107
creator Troger, Tobias
Sommer, Grit
Lang-Muritano, Mariarosaria
Konrad, Daniel
Kuhlmann, Beatrice
Zumsteg, Urs
Flück, Christa E
description Patients with classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) often do not achieve their full growth potential. Adrenarche may accelerate bone maturation and thereby result in decreased growth in CAH. The study aimed to analyze the impact of growth during adrenarche on final height of adequately treated classic CAH patients. This retrospective, multicenter study (4 academic pediatric endocrinology centers) included 41 patients with classical CAH, born 1990-2012. We assessed skeletal maturation (bone age), growth velocity, and (projected) adult height outcomes, and analyzed potential influencing factors, such as sex, genotype, and glucocorticoid therapy. Patients with classic CAH were shorter than peers (-0.4 SDS ± 0.8 SD) and their parents (corrected final height -0.6 SDS ± 1.0 SD). Analysis of growth during adrenarche revealed 2 different growth patterns: patients with accelerating bone age (49%), and patients with nonaccelerating bone age relative to chronological age (BA-CA). Patients with accelerating BA-CA were taller than the normal population during adrenarche years (P = 0.001) and were predicted to achieve lower adult height SDS (-0.9 SDS [95% CI, -1.3; -0.5]) than nonaccelerating patients when assessed during adrenarche (0.2 SDS [95% CI, -0.3; 0.8]). Final adult height was similarly reduced in both accelerating and nonaccelerating BA-CA groups (-0.4 SDS [95% CI, -0.9; 0.1] vs -0.3 SDS [95% CI, [-0.8; 0.1]). Patients with and without significant bone age advancement, and thus differing height prediction during adrenarche, showed similar (predicted) final height when reassessed during pubertal years. Bone age alone should not be used during adrenarche as clinical marker for metabolic control in CAH treatment.
doi_str_mv 10.1210/clinem/dgab701
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Adrenarche may accelerate bone maturation and thereby result in decreased growth in CAH. The study aimed to analyze the impact of growth during adrenarche on final height of adequately treated classic CAH patients. This retrospective, multicenter study (4 academic pediatric endocrinology centers) included 41 patients with classical CAH, born 1990-2012. We assessed skeletal maturation (bone age), growth velocity, and (projected) adult height outcomes, and analyzed potential influencing factors, such as sex, genotype, and glucocorticoid therapy. Patients with classic CAH were shorter than peers (-0.4 SDS ± 0.8 SD) and their parents (corrected final height -0.6 SDS ± 1.0 SD). Analysis of growth during adrenarche revealed 2 different growth patterns: patients with accelerating bone age (49%), and patients with nonaccelerating bone age relative to chronological age (BA-CA). Patients with accelerating BA-CA were taller than the normal population during adrenarche years (P = 0.001) and were predicted to achieve lower adult height SDS (-0.9 SDS [95% CI, -1.3; -0.5]) than nonaccelerating patients when assessed during adrenarche (0.2 SDS [95% CI, -0.3; 0.8]). Final adult height was similarly reduced in both accelerating and nonaccelerating BA-CA groups (-0.4 SDS [95% CI, -0.9; 0.1] vs -0.3 SDS [95% CI, [-0.8; 0.1]). Patients with and without significant bone age advancement, and thus differing height prediction during adrenarche, showed similar (predicted) final height when reassessed during pubertal years. 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Adrenarche may accelerate bone maturation and thereby result in decreased growth in CAH. The study aimed to analyze the impact of growth during adrenarche on final height of adequately treated classic CAH patients. This retrospective, multicenter study (4 academic pediatric endocrinology centers) included 41 patients with classical CAH, born 1990-2012. We assessed skeletal maturation (bone age), growth velocity, and (projected) adult height outcomes, and analyzed potential influencing factors, such as sex, genotype, and glucocorticoid therapy. Patients with classic CAH were shorter than peers (-0.4 SDS ± 0.8 SD) and their parents (corrected final height -0.6 SDS ± 1.0 SD). Analysis of growth during adrenarche revealed 2 different growth patterns: patients with accelerating bone age (49%), and patients with nonaccelerating bone age relative to chronological age (BA-CA). Patients with accelerating BA-CA were taller than the normal population during adrenarche years (P = 0.001) and were predicted to achieve lower adult height SDS (-0.9 SDS [95% CI, -1.3; -0.5]) than nonaccelerating patients when assessed during adrenarche (0.2 SDS [95% CI, -0.3; 0.8]). Final adult height was similarly reduced in both accelerating and nonaccelerating BA-CA groups (-0.4 SDS [95% CI, -0.9; 0.1] vs -0.3 SDS [95% CI, [-0.8; 0.1]). Patients with and without significant bone age advancement, and thus differing height prediction during adrenarche, showed similar (predicted) final height when reassessed during pubertal years. 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Adrenarche may accelerate bone maturation and thereby result in decreased growth in CAH. The study aimed to analyze the impact of growth during adrenarche on final height of adequately treated classic CAH patients. This retrospective, multicenter study (4 academic pediatric endocrinology centers) included 41 patients with classical CAH, born 1990-2012. We assessed skeletal maturation (bone age), growth velocity, and (projected) adult height outcomes, and analyzed potential influencing factors, such as sex, genotype, and glucocorticoid therapy. Patients with classic CAH were shorter than peers (-0.4 SDS ± 0.8 SD) and their parents (corrected final height -0.6 SDS ± 1.0 SD). Analysis of growth during adrenarche revealed 2 different growth patterns: patients with accelerating bone age (49%), and patients with nonaccelerating bone age relative to chronological age (BA-CA). Patients with accelerating BA-CA were taller than the normal population during adrenarche years (P = 0.001) and were predicted to achieve lower adult height SDS (-0.9 SDS [95% CI, -1.3; -0.5]) than nonaccelerating patients when assessed during adrenarche (0.2 SDS [95% CI, -0.3; 0.8]). Final adult height was similarly reduced in both accelerating and nonaccelerating BA-CA groups (-0.4 SDS [95% CI, -0.9; 0.1] vs -0.3 SDS [95% CI, [-0.8; 0.1]). Patients with and without significant bone age advancement, and thus differing height prediction during adrenarche, showed similar (predicted) final height when reassessed during pubertal years. 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subjects Adolescent
Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital - drug therapy
Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital - genetics
Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital - metabolism
Adrenarche - metabolism
Adrenogenital syndrome
Age Determination by Skeleton
Analysis
Body Height
Child
Child Development
Corticosteroids
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Drug Monitoring - methods
Female
Genetic aspects
Genetic disorders
Glucocorticoids - administration & dosage
Growth
Humans
Hydroxyprogesterone
Male
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Online Only
Patient compliance
Pediatrics
Puberty
Retrospective Studies
title Characteristics of Growth in Children With Classic Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia due to 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency During Adrenarche and Beyond
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