The Prevalence of 5 α -Reductase Deficiency in Children with Ambiguous Genitalia in the Dominican Republic
- 1 October 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Urology
- Vol. 136 (4) , 867-873
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-5347(17)45108-1
Abstract
During a 10-year period 65 children and adolescents with ambiguous genitalia from the Dominican Republic, not known through kindred studies of 5.alpha.-reductase deficiency, were evaluated. Plasma androgen determinations were performed before and/or after Leydig cell stimulation of the testes with human chorionic gonadotropin. Of the children there were 24 female pseudohermaphrodites, 21 of whom had 21-hydroxylase deficiency, 1 true hermaphrodite and 40 (62 per cent) male pseudohermaphrodites. One child had a human chorionic gonadotropin response suggestive of 17-20 desmolase deficiency, and on further evaluation he also had partial deficiencies of the enzymes 21-hydroxylase and 17.alpha.-hydroxylase. Five subjects had a female phenotype and subnormal androgen responses to human chorionic gonadotropin. In 5 of 33 male pseudohermaphrodites with a normal testosterone response to human chorionic gonadotropin 5.alpha.-reductase deficiency was suspected by elevated plasma testosterone/dihydrotestosterone ratios before and/or after human chorionic gonadotropin stimulation. The diagnosis of 5.alpha.-reductase deficiency was confirmed by elevated 5.beta./5.alpha. urinary C19 and C21 steroid metabolite ratios. One subject with 5.alpha.-reductase deficiency was traced to the original Dominican kindred of 38 affected subjects. Pedigree analysis of another proband revealed 3 additional affected relatives. Four subjects with a normal testosterone response to human chorionic gonadotropin had XO/XY gonadal dysgenesis. There were 25 male pseudohermaphrodites with normal plasma testosterone and dihydrotestosterone responses to human chorionic gonadotropin, who were not diagnosed by this methodology. This study reveals that 5.alpha.-reductase deficiency occurs with a frequency of 13 per cent as a cause of male pseudohermaphroditism in the Dominican Republic with approximately the same frequency as XO/XY gonadal dysgenesis. Unlike female pseudohermaphrodites, the majority of male subjects with pseudohermaphroditism remain unclassified by these techniques.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
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