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The growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor axis: its manipulation for the benefit of growth disorders in renal failure
Authors:Roelfsema V  Clark R G
Affiliation:Research Centre for Developmental Medicine and Biology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Science, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Abstract:Renal failure is associated with dramatic changes in the growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor (GH/IGF) axis. In children, this results in growth retardation, which is treated with injections of recombinant human GH (rhGH). Given the many recent advances in the knowledge of the components of the GH/IGF axis, it is timely to review the role of GH in renal failure and to discuss likely new treatments for growth failure. Renal failure is not a state of GH deficiency but a state of GH and IGF resistance, making other approaches to manipulating the GH axis more logical than treatment with rhGH alone. Although in children rhGH is safe, in critically ill adults it can be lethal. As the mechanisms of these lethal actions of rhGH are unknown, caution is advised when using rhGH outside approved indications. In renal failure, an optimal balance between safety and efficacy for growth may be achieved with the use of the combination of rhGH and rhIGF-I, as animal studies have shown synergistic growth responses. However, inhibition of the GH axis, with the use of GH antagonists, is likely to be tested clinically given the beneficial effects of GH antagonists on renal function in animal models of renal disease. Manipulating IGF-I by either administering rhIGF-1 or its binding proteins or increasing IGF-I bioavailability with the use of IGF displacers could prove to be a safer and more effective alternative to the use of rhGH in renal failure. In the future, both rhGH and rhIGF-1 likely will be included in growth-promoting hormone cocktails tailored to correct specific growth disorders.
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