TY - JOUR
T1 - Growth Hormone Treatment and Papilledema :
T2 - A Prospective Pilot Study
AU - Martín-Begué, Nieves
AU - Mogas, Eduard
AU - Dod, Charlotte Wolley
AU - Alarcón, Silvia
AU - Clemente, María
AU - Campos-Martorell, Ariadna
AU - Fábregas, Ana
AU - Yeste Fernández, Diego
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - To investigate the incidence of pseudotumor cerebri syndrome (PTCS) in children treated with growth hormone (GH) in a paediatric hospital and to identify risk factors for this complication. Prospective pilot study of paediatric patients treated with recombinant human GH, prescribed by the Paediatric Endocrinology Department, between February 2013 and September 2017. In all these patients, a fundus examination was performed before starting treatment and 3-4 months later. Two hundred and eighty-nine patients were included, of whom 244 (84.4%) had GH deficiency, 36 (12.5%) had short stature associated with small for gestational age, six (2.1%) had a mutation in the SHOX gene and three (1.0%) had Prader-Willi syndrome. Five (1.7%) developed papilledema, all were asymptomatic and had GH deficiency due to craniopharyngioma (n=1), polymalformative syndrome associated with hypothalamic-pituitary axis anomalies (n=2), a non-specified genetic disease with hippocampal inversion (n=1) and one with normal magnetic resonance imaging who had developed a primary PTCS years before. GH treatment is a cause of PTCS. In our series, at risk patients had GH deficiency and hypothalamic-pituitary anatomic anomalies or genetic or chromosomal diseases. Fundus examination should be systematically screened in all patients in this at-risk group, irrespective of the presence or not of symptoms.
AB - To investigate the incidence of pseudotumor cerebri syndrome (PTCS) in children treated with growth hormone (GH) in a paediatric hospital and to identify risk factors for this complication. Prospective pilot study of paediatric patients treated with recombinant human GH, prescribed by the Paediatric Endocrinology Department, between February 2013 and September 2017. In all these patients, a fundus examination was performed before starting treatment and 3-4 months later. Two hundred and eighty-nine patients were included, of whom 244 (84.4%) had GH deficiency, 36 (12.5%) had short stature associated with small for gestational age, six (2.1%) had a mutation in the SHOX gene and three (1.0%) had Prader-Willi syndrome. Five (1.7%) developed papilledema, all were asymptomatic and had GH deficiency due to craniopharyngioma (n=1), polymalformative syndrome associated with hypothalamic-pituitary axis anomalies (n=2), a non-specified genetic disease with hippocampal inversion (n=1) and one with normal magnetic resonance imaging who had developed a primary PTCS years before. GH treatment is a cause of PTCS. In our series, at risk patients had GH deficiency and hypothalamic-pituitary anatomic anomalies or genetic or chromosomal diseases. Fundus examination should be systematically screened in all patients in this at-risk group, irrespective of the presence or not of symptoms.
KW - Growth hormone treatment
KW - Pseudotumor cerebri syndrome
KW - Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
KW - Papilledema
KW - Risk factors
U2 - 10.4274/jcrpe.galenos.2020.2020.0007
DO - 10.4274/jcrpe.galenos.2020.2020.0007
M3 - Article
C2 - 33006547
SN - 1308-5727
VL - 13
SP - 146
EP - 151
JO - JCRPE Journal of Clinical Research in Pediatric Endocrinology
JF - JCRPE Journal of Clinical Research in Pediatric Endocrinology
ER -