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1.
ABSTRACT. Growth was documented over a period of 7 years in all long-term survivors treated for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) with the DAL-70- ( n =15) and BFM-70-protocol ( n =27). Normal growth was documented in patients of the DAL-70-protocol during and after therapy. In contrast, in children treated with the BFM-70-protocol the mean height standard deviation score (SDS) decreased significantly from 1.21 SDS prior to therapy to 0.80 SDS at the end of therapy ( p <0.001) and remained unchanged thereafter. Prophylactic cranial irradiation was given in total doses of 15 to 30 Gy. Ten children of the DAL-70- and 20 children of the BFM-70-protocol received 24 Gy of cranial irradiation. No significant change in height-SDS was observed in any patients of the DAL-70- and in 8 patients of the BFM-70-group, who received 24 Gy of cranial irradiation in 16–26 fractions. Adult height in 7 girls and 6 boys was normal and 3.15 cm and 5.06 cm above target height. In the remaining 12 patients of the BFM-70-protocol the total dose of 24 Gy of cranial irradiation was applied in 11–14 fractions. Their height-SDS had faUen significantly from 1.24 SDS before to 0.66 SDS ( p <0.001) at the end of therapy. Adult height in 4 girls and 6 boys was also normal, but the height increase was comparatively smaller, –2.20 cm below target height in the girls and 1.91 cm above in the boys. We conclude, that the loss of height-SDS in patients with ALL receiving 24 Gy of cranial irradiation is most probably due to the number of fractions of irradiation and not to the total radiation dose or the type of chemotherapy.  相似文献   

2.
Survival of children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) has increased considerably in recent years and data on the spontaneous growth and final height of these children are conflicting. Therefore, we analysed the longitudinal growth and final height in 52 survivors (33 females, 19 males) of childhood ALL. These children were diagnosed and treated in a single institution, all remained in first remission and were submitted to cranial irradiation with either 2400 or 1800 cGy. None of the patients received testicular or spinal irradiation. Median age at diagnosis was 4.2 (range 1.3–9.6) years in the first group (2400 cGy) and 3.9 (0.8–10.5) years in the second (1800 cGy). Standing height was measured at diagnosis, at the end of treatment (median 3.1 years after diagnosis), 6, 12, 24 months after the end of treatment, and finally at the completion of growth. In girls a significant decrease of mean height standard deviation score (SDS) during treatment and a catch up in growth after the end of therapy was followed by a second period of reduced growth. Mean final height SDS was significantly lower than the value at diagnosis in both groups of girls, but only in males treated with 2400 cGy. Mean overall loss in height SDS from diagnosis to final heigth was higher in females (–1.24) than in males (–0.40) (P=0.009). Females <-4 years of age at diagnosis showed a higher loss in final height than females >4 years. An unchanged or improved final height was evident in 8 cases, the other 44 cases showed a final height decrease between –0.1 and –2 SDS in 36 and >-2 SDS in 8, 6 of whom were females <-4 years at diagnosis and only 1 a female >4 years. Only females treated at a younger age showed a final height lower than midparental height (–5.7±1.8 cm,P<0.01), particularly those treated with 2400 cGy (–7.5±2.5 cm,P<0.05). Menarche occurred earlier than in the normal population (11.5±1.2 years) with no differences between the two radiation dosages.Conclusion Females, notably young girls, treated for ALL show a greater decrease in the final height than treated males. Early sexual maturation may contribute to the decrease in the final height. A better growth pattern seems to be shown by patients irradiated with the lower dosage.  相似文献   

3.
Longitudinal growth was studied in children treated for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). The aim of the study was to compare these children's growth velocity with findings in a previous study we performed on age-matched children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who received cranial irradiation. Nine children with NHL with an onset time of treatment between 4 and 9 years of age (mean 6.5 years) were studied with annual body measurements taken from the time of the diagnosis and thereafter annually during the following 4 years. None of the children received cranial irradiation. During the first treatment year a significantly low mean height velocity was observed (-1.4 standard deviation score [SDS]) for the NHL group. The consecutive two 1 year periods showed a normalization of the mean height velocity. For the group of children with ALL, there was a more prominent negative effect on height during the first 2 years of treatment than for the NHL group in the present study. After the cessation of therapy, the children with NHL showed a reduced catch-up growth compared with the children with ALL. The explanation offered is that cranial irradiation has a heavier impact on growth than chemotherapy during the first 2 years of treatment, but an intense chemotherapy during the maintenance period could have a considerable impact in blunting growth.  相似文献   

4.
Growth patterns of 85 survivors of childhood leukemia were analyzed retrospectively. All patients remained in first remission with no central nervous system involvement. The mean age at diagnosis was 5.8 +/- 3.6 years. The diagnoses were acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in 68 patients (80%) and acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) in 17 patients (20%). All except two patients received cranial irradiation: 51 patients with 1,800 cGy and 32 patients with 2,400 cGy. Mean height SDS was -0.7 +/- 1.36 at the time of diagnosis, which decreased to -0.92 +/- 1.31 by the end of treatment, and further decreased to -1.14 +/- 1.38 at 6 years after cessation of treatment. Mean weight SDS was -0.55 +/- 1.13 at the time of diagnosis, increasing slightly to -0.39 +/- 1.02 at the end of treatment, and decreasing to -0.46 +/- 1.65 at 6 years after cessation of treatment. Of these survivors, 51 patients (26 boys and 25 girls) reached a final height that was 1.04 SDS or 5.3 cm less than their target height. There was no difference of height and weight SDS between patients with ALL and ANLL. Girls and boys had different growth patterns. Girls had a slightly increased height SDS and gained more weight after cessation of treatment, resulting in less final height deficit and overweight for height, whereas boys had further height and weight reduction resulting in more deficit of final height.  相似文献   

5.
Bone age was assessed in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) using the Tanner-Whitehouse II method. X-rays of the left hand (wrist) were made at diagnosis and annually until 5 years after diagnosis. A total of 164 X-rays from 40 patients was available. During treatment bone age development as well as height growth was retarded in relation to calendar age. A catch-up of bone age and height was observed in the 2 years after cessation of treatment. No significant differences could be found between patients with and without cranial irradiation as central nervous system treatment. Therefore cranial irradiation alone is not responsible for the growth retardation of children with ALL; the causative role of cytostatic drug therapy and/or corticosteroids has to be investigated. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
This first report from a population-based postnatal growth study of 3650 healthy Swedish subjects born at full term provides new reference values for height and weight and shows that over the last 20 years there has been a small secular trend in height (0.2–0.4 SDS over the whole age range) in Sweden in both boys and girls. Within this cohort, 111 (3.1%) were of low birth weight (below –2 SDS) and 141 (3.5%) were of low birth length (below –2 SDS); 54 (1.5%) were both light and short at birth. Of the children born small for gestational age, 87% showed full catch-up growth within 2 years of life. They attained puberty at a normal or early age and reached a mean final height of –0.7 SDS. The remaining subgroup of 13% born small for gestational age remained below –2 SDS throughout childhood and reached puberty somewhat early. Their mean final height was –1.7 SDS. The current data set is too small to identify possible background factors, but it is being expanded with this objective in mind.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Growth deficit has been reported as a frequent complication of the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). PROCEDURE: Longitudinal analysis of the growth of 129 children, from a total of 351 cases diagnosed between 1987 and 1994 in Brazil, was determined. Height data were converted into standard deviation Z scores. Only girls younger than 10 and boys younger than 12 years old at diagnosis were included. Patients were treated according to a German BFM-83 based protocol. Fifty-eight children received 18 Gy cranial irradiation, four 12 Gy, and two 24 Gy. Patients were aggregated into five non-excluding groups according to availability of height data at diagnosis, during the treatment, at the end of it, and several years after; 35 children reached their final height. RESULTS: Height deficit at the end of the therapeutic treatment was evident (P < 0.0001). Catch-up occurred 1 year after stopping treatment (P = 0.016). At the last follow-up, over 5 years after the end of treatment (n = 83) or at final height (n = 35), impressive height deficits were recorded (P < 0.0001 for both end points). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that growth impairment was more severe in children younger than 4 years at diagnosis and in those who received cranial irradiation. No significant effect of gender was observed. Children who were treated solely with chemotherapy also had significant height loss. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment of ALL in children is associated with growth deficit during the treatment and several years after it, affecting the final height negatively, particularly in patients younger than 4 and in those who received cranial irradiation.  相似文献   

8.
A minority of children born small for gestational age (SGA) fail to achieve sufficient catch-up growth during infancy and remain short throughout childhood, apparently without being growth hormone (GH) deficient. The effect of GH administration was evaluated over 2 years in short prepubertal children born SGA. The children ( n = 244), who were taking part in four independent multicentre studies, had been randomly allocated to groups receiving either no treatment or GH treatment at a daily dose of 0.1, 0.2 or 0.3 IU/kg (0.033, 0.067 or 0.1 mg/kg) s.c. At birth, their mean length SD score (SDS) was -3.6 and their mean weight SDS -2.6; at the start of the study, mean age was 5.2 years, bone age 3.8 years, height SDS -3.3, height SDS adjusted for parental height -2.4, weight SDS -4.7 and body mass index (BMI) SDS -1.4. The untreated children had a low-normal growth velocity and poor weight gain. Although bone maturation progressed more slowly than chronological age, final height prognosis tended to decrease, according to height SDS for bone age. GH treatment induced a dose-dependent effect on growth, up to a near doubling of height velocity and weight gain; BMI SDS was not altered. Bone maturation was also accelerated differentially; however, final height prognosis increased in all GH treatment groups. The more pronounced growth responses were observed in younger children with a lower height and weight SDS. In conclusion, GH administration is a promising therapy for normalizing short stature and low weight after insufficient catch-up growth in children born SGA. Long-term strategies incorporating GH therapy now remain to be established.  相似文献   

9.
The five-year over all survival rates of childhood lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have recently increased to more than 80%. During recent years, CNS radiation doses delivered to all children with ALL according to international guideline protocols have decreased. In the 1980s, the prophylactic radiation dose to the CNS decreased from 2400 cGy to 1800 cGy; in the 1990s chemotherapy alone with intrathecal chemotherapy demonstrated that there was no need for prophylactic CNS radiation in standard risk ALL, except in CNS relapse and high risk patients. Late effects on pituitary function and growth were reported by most endocrinologists involved in the follow-up of the cancer survivors. The long-term effects of cranial irradiation on growth in children treated for ALL are reviewed, specifically addressing the deficit in final height, contributing factors for height deficits, growth catch-up after stopping therapy, and growth hormone replacement therapy.  相似文献   

10.
Pubertal growth was studied in 10 girls previously treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The average age at menarche was 12.2 years, which is significantly lower (p less than 0.01) than the expected 13.1 years. Compared with normal girls, these girls showed a subnormal (p less than 0.05) peak height velocity during the second year before menarche. The remaining growth before menarche as well as the total postmenarchal growth was close to the normal average. The average final standing height was 1 SD less than what would be expected from their height 1 year after the cessation of therapy. A relative growth hormone deficiency in combination with early onset of puberty could account for this loss in final height.  相似文献   

11.
Chemotherapy-related growth failure is a significant problem in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and other childhood cancers. Growth impairment after cranial radiation (CR) can result in diminished adult height, but growth failure following chemotherapy without CR is usually followed by catch-up growth and normal adult height.1 A retrospective review of 347 ALL survivors registered in our Long Term Follow Up (LTFU) Clinic, since 1997 revealed that 109 had received CR; 3, total body irradiation (TBI); and 235, neither CR nor TBI. For patients whose growth velocity slowed, growth hormone (GH) levels and pediatric endocrinology referrals were obtained. Among the 112 ALL survivors who had received some form of CR, 5 had significant growth failure with growth hormone deficiency (GHD). Among the 235 ALL survivors treated with chemotherapy without CR, 2 were diagnosed with growth failure and GHD. We report the two survivors of childhood ALL treated with chemotherapy without CR who required GH replacement due to absence of catch-up growth. A 15-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl, off therapy for 9 and 6 years, respectively, were evaluated for decreased growth velocity and failure of catch-up growth. Peak GH responses to stimulation using arginine and clonidine were 3.4 and 3.0 ng/ml, respectively (normal >10 ng/ml). Other causes of growth failure were ruled out, and GH replacement therapy was instituted. Their chemotherapy had included methotrexate, 6 mercaptopurine, vincristine, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, L-asparaginase, dexamethasone, cytarabine, 6 thioguanine, and intrathecal methotrexate. The growth of all children treated with intensive chemotherapy, regardless of whether CR was administered, should be closely monitored with measurement of standing height at 6 months intervals until growth is complete.  相似文献   

12.
The response to growth hormone (GH) therapy was studied in children born small for gestational age (SGA; n = 593) and in those with Silver–Russell syndrome (SRS; n = 127) using data from KIGS (Kabi International Growth Study). For the SGA patients, median birth weight was -2.6 SD scores (SDS), treatment was started at a median age of 9.2 years, at a time when median height was -2.8 SDS while median target height was -1.4 SDS. For the SRS patients, median birth weight was -3.1 SDS, treatment was started at a median age of 7.0 years, at a time when median height was -3.4 SDS with a median target height of -0.1 SDS. GH treatment increased height SDS in both SGA children and patients with SRS; in 16 SGA patients treated to (near) final height with GH (median dose, 0.7 IU/kg/week), height minus target height SDS was -2.0 at the start of treatment and -1.0 at final height. In conclusion, the results obtained in KIGS indicate that GH treatment of short children born SGA is effective in increasing final height above the predicted height and in achieving the target height.  相似文献   

13.
Eighty-five percent of children born with IUGR have spontaneous catch-up growth in the first 2 years of life; however, about 10 to 15% do not catch up. Numerous therapeutic trials have demonstrated the efficacy of GH treatment in these children. However, the duration of this treatment is still discussed. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to describe the evolution of growth during and after the end of treatment. POPULATION AND METHODS: This study followed 33 children in our unit, treated with growth hormone under the French indication (3 years of treatment followed by 1 year off treatment) and with a mean follow-up of 3 years after cessation. RESULTS: During the 3 years of therapy, we confirmed an increase in growth velocity that resulted in a mean height above -2 standard deviation score (SDS) in 25 children at 3 years (mean height of 1.4 SDS). Among the 25 children who achieved a height above -2 SDS at three years and therefore stopped treatment, 15 resumed GH due to a secondary catch-down. Among children who didn't catch-up at 3 years, the continuation of GH treatment didn't seem to improve the growth.  相似文献   

14.
ABSTRACT. Growth and endocrine status of 38 Nordic children surviving from medulloblastoma were reevaluated 5–15 years after the diagnosis. Group I included children treated before the age of 10, and group II were the patients > 10 years at onset of tumour therapy. The median time interval from diagnosis to reexamination was 9 and 7 8/12 years in groups I and II ( p >0.1). The trunchal and standing height were highly affected at the follow-up. The median standing height standard deviation score (SDS) was -2.0 in group I and - 1.7 in group II. The corresponding median sitting height SDS was -2.5 in group I and +2.0 in group II. Growth hormone deficiency was found in 23 % of the patients, and only in group I. In both groups 69 96 had increased serum TSH concentrations (median 6.5 mU/I, range 1.3–30 mU/I) in spite of normal free T4 and total T3 levels. Hypogonadism and ACTH deficiency were rarely seen.
Conclusion: In patients treated for medulloblastoma, particularly when treated in early childhood, pronounced alterations appear in growth and endocrine systems. In the general clinical control of these patients anthropometric and endocrinological tests have to be included.  相似文献   

15.
Longitudinal records from 13,707 children (6749 boys and 6958 girls), aged 6–17 years, were fitted by a smoothing cubic spline function, and the factors influencing changes in height SD score (SDS) during puberty were analysed. Height SDS at 6 years correlated closely with final height SDS. However, short children at 6 years of age tended to increase their height SDS at final height, whereas tall children at the same age tended to decrease their final height SDS. For children with the same prepubertal height, the later that pubertal maturation occurred, the greater was the final height achieved. As short children entered puberty relatively late and tall children entered puberty relatively early, height SDS tended to approach 0 SD during puberty. A prediction function obtained by multiple regression analysis using height SDS at 6 years, the percentage by which the child is overweight at 6 years, age at onset of the pubertal growth spurt (PGS) and height at onset of the PGS provides a reasonable model for the prediction of final height SDS without the need to estimate bone age.  相似文献   

16.
PURPOSE: To assess the effect of maintenance chemotherapy (MT) on growth factors and growth in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-one children (10 girls, 11 boys) with standard risk pre-B ALL treated with chemotherapy had serum insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), serum IGF binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) levels, and linear growth and weight data measured every 3 months during MT. The levels of the cytotoxic metabolites of methotrexate (MTX) and 6-mercaptopurine (6MP) (i.e., erythrocyte MTX polyglutamates [E-MTX], and erythrocyte 6-thioguanine nucleotides [E-6TGN]), s-aminotransferases, and white blood counts (WBC) were measured at least monthly. RESULTS: At the beginning of MT, the median IGF-I standard deviation scores (SDS) and IGFBP-3 SDS were -0.52 and -0.09, respectively, which declined during MT to -1.67 (P < 0.001) and -1.82 (P < 0.001), respectively. At the time of diagnosis, the median height SDS was -0.4, which declined during MT to a median height SDS of -0.9 at cessation of therapy. No significant correlations were found between growth factor levels, growth and body mass index (BMI) versus the doses of MTX, and 6MP, E-MTX, E-6TGN, s-aminotransferases, or WBC. CONCLUSIONS: A significant decline in IGF-I, IGFBP-3, and growth retardation may not be directly related to the treatment intensity during MT.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT. The linear growth of Swedish children with cystic fibrosis (CF), is described using the infancy–childhood–puberty (ICP) growth model. Length/height was studied in 51 patients during their first 8 years of life. The median age at diagnosis was 0.4 years (range 0.0–6.1 years). At birth, their mean length was close to normal, but the gain in length over the first 0.25 years of life was significantly below normal, resulting in a mean length SDS of -1.3. Length remained subnormal up to 1.0 year of age. Thereafter, catch-up growth occurred, resulting in almost normal height (mean SDS -0.3) at 5.0 years of age. Between 5.0 and 8.0 years of age growth was normal. The mean age at onset of the childhood component was not significantly different from the controls. Hence, the catch-up growth did not occur until after the onset of the childhood component. This study shows that the postnatal linear growth rate is retarded in children with CF during the first months of life. This is almost completely compensated for by a supranormal growth rate that starts at the end of the first year of life.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE--To determine the effects of 18-Gy cranial irradiation on growth, growth hormone (GH) secretion, and pituitary magnetic resonance imaging in children who underwent previous irradiation for treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. DESIGN--Clinical survey. SETTING--Department of Pediatrics of the University of Bologna (Italy). PATIENTS--Ten boys and 18 girls who were treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia; median age at diagnosis was 3.1 years and at the end of follow-up was 11.5 years. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS--Height was periodically measured from diagnosis until the end of follow-up, when GH secretion study and magnetic resonance imaging were performed. The mean height SD score was significantly lower than at diagnosis only at the end of treatment. Nocturnal mean GH concentration and GH response to pharmacological tests (arginine and levodopa [L-dopa]) were pathological in 22 cases (81.5%) and 18 cases (64.3%), respectively. Sixteen cases (59.2%) had a blunted GH release to the three tests. Mean pituitary anterior lobe height was reduced and seven subjects (25%) showed an empty sella. CONCLUSIONS--Cranial irradiation with 18 Gy does not seem to influence the growth pattern of most children who are treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, despite severe impairment of GH secretion and morphological abnormalities of the sellar area. However, a follow-up until final height is necessary.  相似文献   

19.
Growth, weight gain, and human growth hormone secretion were studied for 3 to 7 years in 27 children with acute leukemia in complete continuous remission. Growth and weight gain were matched for sex and age by calculating the standard deviation score. The mean SD score for height velocity was subnormal during the three years of therapy. A catch up in growth and weight gain occurred during the first year after the cessation of therapy. The loss of final attained height was small. HGH secretion was studied at the end of therapy and at yearly intervals thereafter by two provocative tests; glucagon and sleep. No significant difference in secretion was seen between the group studied and a control group of children. Acute leukemia, children, growth, growth hormone, irradiation, weight gain.  相似文献   

20.
Currently, X-linked hypophosphataemic rickets (XLHR) is most commonly treated with a combination of phosphate and vitamin D, but there is conflicting evidence about the effects of this treatment on linear growth. In all, 25 patients with XLHR (current age range, 4.1–22.1 years; median, 8.2 years) were studied to determine whether there was any improvement in height SDS during treatment. The duration of therapy was 2.9–15.0 years (median, 5.7 years). Measurements before the age of 2 years or after the onset of puberty were excluded to remove the effects of measurement difficulties in small infants and of variation in pubertal timing. The growth of these patients was compared with a similar group of untreated historical controls. Patients treated with calcitriol and phosphate for at least 2 years before the onset of puberty (n = 22) had a significantly better mean height SDS than the historical controls (-1.23 compared with —2.05 for the historical controls; p = 0.02). Among patients treated with calcitriol and phosphate for at least 2 years (n = 21), the change in height SDS had a positive correlation with the duration of therapy ( r = 0.51; p = 0.02). The growth of children with XLHR treated with combination therapy was thus significantly better than that of historical controls.  相似文献   

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