Precocious or Early Puberty and Growth Failure in Girls Treated for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Hormone Research
- Vol. 30 (2-3) , 72-76
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000181032
Abstract
We have studied 41 children with early or precocious puberty who have been treated for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia with prophylactic cranial irradiation (1,800-2,400 cGy) accompanied by intrathecal methotrexate and systemic chemotherapy. Mean age at radiotherapy was 3.9 years (range 1.7-7.7) in the girls and 4.8 years (range 2.6-7.8) in the boys. Mean age at the onset of puberty was 8.6 years (range 6.7-9.7) in the girls and 9.3 years (range 7.8-10.3) in the boys. Of the 41 children with early puberty (greater than 1.4 SD from the mean) 36 were females and 5 were males. 21 of the 36 girls had an absent or inadequate growth acceleration of puberty. 7 of 12 girls who had a pharmacological test of growth hormone (GH) secretion had GH insufficiency (peak level less than 20 mU/l). Early or precocious puberty combined with GH insufficiency may produce severe growth failure and we have used a treatment regimen of a gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogue, in order to reduce the rate of epiphyseal maturation, combined with biosynthetic GH to increase or sustain growth rate. We have treated 4 girls in this manner. During a mean treatment period of 0.86 years, height SDS for bone age rose from a mean of -1.06 to -0.59. Longer treatment periods will be required to assess the effect on final height.Keywords
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