The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 84, No. 10 3575-3578
Copyright © 1999 by The Endocrine Society
Lack of Effect of GnRH Agonists on Final Height in Girls with Advanced Puberty: A Randomized Long-Term Pilot Study
C. Bouvattier,
J. Coste,
D. Rodrigue,
C. Teinturier,
J. C. Carel,
J. L. Chaussain and
P. F. Bougnères
Pediatric Endocrinology (C.B., D.R.R., C.T., J.C.C., J.L.C.,
P.F.B.) and Biostatistics (J.C.), Hôpital Cochin-Saint Vincent de
Paul, Paris, France 75014
Address correspondence and requests for reprints to: Pierre Bougnères, Endocrinologie, Hôpital St Vincent de Paul, 82 avenue Denfert Rochereau, Paris, France 75014; E-mail:
bougneres{at}cochin.inserm.fr
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Abstract
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GnRH agonists improve final height in girls with "true" precocious
puberty. To test if a comparable effect can be obtained in older girls,
we performed a long-term controlled study in 30 caucasian girls whose
puberty started between 8.4 and 10 yr (9.4 ± 0.1 yr), a variant
of normal called "advanced" puberty. At entry into trial, these
girls had clinical, biological, and sonographic manifestations of
puberty and a bone age greater than 10.9 yr. They were randomized 2:1
to receive 3.75 mg triptorelin im every 4 weeks for 2 yr (n = 20,
group I) or no treatment (n = 10, group II). Mean height at
inclusion was 135.2 ± 4.3 cm (+0.6 SDS) in group I,
136.1 ± 4.2 cm (+0.8 SDS ) in group II, with target
height 157.6 ± 4.3 cm (group I) and 157.8 ± 4.7 cm (group
II), and predicted height (Bayley-Pinneau) 154.1 ± 3.9 cm and
155.2 ± 3.7 cm. Although GnRH agonists transiently delayed sexual
maturation as well as bone age and growth rate, they had no clear-cut
long-standing effect, and final height was comparable in treated
(157.6 ± 4.0 cm) and untreated girls (156.1 ± 5.3 cm) (NS).
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Introduction
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PUBERTY increases growth velocity and bone
maturation, leading to epiphyseal fusion and achievement of final
height. "True" precocious puberty is defined as the development of
secondary sex manifestations within a variable time course in caucasian
girls before 8 yr of age (1). Thirty years ago, untreated girls with
precocious puberty were found to reach a mean adult height of 155.5 cm
(2). Later reports included either small cohorts of untreated girls
with good height prognosis (3, 4, 5) or patients studied retrospectively
after attainment of final height (6, 7). Adult heights varied in these
studies between 156 and 156.5 cm. The effect of GnRH agonists on adult
height in girls with "true" precocious puberty has been documented
only in long-term uncontrolled trials (8) and remains a hotly debated
topic. Because of the limited amount of data and increasing
clinical interest in using GnRH agonists, a collaborative study of the
Lawson Wilkins and European Society for Pediatric Endocrinology
collected final height data in a large cohort of girls treated with
GnRH analogs and compared them with a historical untreated control
group. Data were obtained retrospectively from 131 treated girls, 49 of
whom had a diagnosis of precocious puberty after 8 yr of age (7).
Conclusions were that "treatment with GnRH agonists does not
significantly alter the final adult height of girls with idiopathic
central precocious puberty whose age at diagnosis is greater than 6
yr". Average final height was nevertheless greater by 1.3 cm than in
the historical group (2, 3, 9).
In contrast with idiopathic central precocious puberty stricto
sensu, "advanced" puberty can be defined by the onset and
rapid progression of pubertal signs between 8 and 10 yr of age in
caucasian girls, earlier than the average age in the general
population, 10 yr (10). Although this situation is a simple variant of
normal, it carries a risk of short final height when it happens in
girls born to relatively short parents. It is therefore a common cause
of referral in pediatric endocrinology. Because the long-term statural
or pubertal blockade with GnRH agonists has not been evaluated in such
subjects, we performed a controlled trial to evaluate the effects of
these agents on adult stature in girls with advanced puberty and short
predicted height.
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Subjects and Methods
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Patients and treatment
Thirty caucasian girls, ages 8.410.0 yr, were included in the
trial during the year 1992 according to the following criteria:
manifestations of advanced puberty: recent and progressive pubertal
onset, defined by breast development (B2-B3) with or without pubic hair
(P1-P3) since 36 months, uterine length greater than 35 mm at
ultrasonography, peak plasma LH response to GnRH greater than 5 UI/L
(9), recent acceleration of growth rate, bone age greater than 10.5 yr;
predicted adult height between -1 and -3 SD.
At time of entry into the trial, children heights were between -1 and
+1.5 SD. Mean maternal and paternal heights were 157.3
± 5.4 cm and 170.9 ± 5.7 cm, respectively, leading to a mean
target height of 157.7 ± 4.3 cm. Bone age was 10.9 ± 0.2
yr. Mean height prognosis, calculated at time of entry using the
Bayley-Pinneau method (11), was 154.5 ± 3.8 cm.
We performed a 2:1 randomization. Twenty girls (group I) were allocated
to receive depot triptorelin (Decapeptyl, Ipsen-Biotech, Paris,
France) at a dose of 3.75 mg im every 28 days as described (10).
Ten girls were left untreated (group II). Adequate inhibition of the
gonadotrophs was assessed clinically by the blockade of pubertal
development and biologically by the suppression of estradiol and of the
LH response to GnRH. Duration of trial was 2 yr. During and after
treatment, growth and bone age were assessed biyearly. Plasma
gonadotropins, estradiol, and sonographic uterine length were measured
every 2 yr in treated patients. Patients in both groups were followed
until final height was considered attained, i.e. after bone
age had reached 16 yr, or when growth rate was less than 0.5 cm the
preceding year. No patient was lost for follow-up.
Informed consent regarding the experimental nature of the study was
obtained from the patients and parents after the protocol had been
approved by the ethical committee of our institution.
Measurements
Bone age was evaluated by two of us (C.B and D.R) according to
Greulich and Pyle (12). Height prognosis was defined by the predicted
height using the method of Bayley-Pinneau (11). Target height was
calculated using Tanners formula (the sum of parental heights
-13)/2. Plasma LH and FSH were measured with an immunoradiometric
assay (Coatria, Biomerieux, Macy lEtoile, France) at baseline, and at
20, 40, 60, and 90 min after iv injection of GnRH (100
µg/m2). Estradiol was measured by RIA with a
limit of detection of 8 pg/mL.
Statistics analysis
Data are reported as mean ± 1 SD. Due to a
reasonably normal distribution of the main variables of interest
(initial and final heights, biological variables), parametric methods
were usedt-test (2-sample test) and Pearson correlation
testto examine relationships between variables. Multiple regression
models of final height prediction were constructed to study factors
simultaneously, to adjust for the potential confounding effect of
baseline characteristics, and to account for the effect of regression
toward the mean (13). A forward stepwise procedure was used (enter
P value = 0.05, remove P value =
0.10).
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Results
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The initial characteristics of the studied patients, including
chronological age, bone age, height, predicted, and target heights were
comparable in the two groups, as well as hormone values and sonographic
measurements of uterus and ovaries (Table 1
).
In girls receiving GnRH agonists, growth velocity decreased from
8.3 ± 1.8 cm/yr before treatment to 6.4 ± 1.3 cm/yr during
the first year, and 4.3 ± 0.3 cm/yr the second year of treatment,
with individual rates as low as 2.5 cm/yr. Untreated girls had a growth
velocity of 8.3 ± 0.4 cm/yr before study, 8.0 ± 1.8 cm/yr
the first year, 6.1 ± 1.4 cm/yr the second year. Height was lower
at 2 yr in the treated group, with a catch-up curve after the cessation
of GnRH agonists, whereas growth rate was decreasing in untreated girls
(Fig. 1
). These kinetics are explained by
the evolution of bone age in the two groups (Fig. 1
), the decreased
maturation leading to a full-year delay in treated girls at 2 yr. One
year after cessation of GnRH agonists, bone age was still only
12.7 ± 0.2 yr in group I (vs. 14.4 ± 0.3 yr in
group II, P = 0.04) and took two more years to reach
15.5 yr (Fig. 1
). The total height gain averaged 22.4 ± 0.9 cm
(range 15.531.5 cm) in treated girls and 20.1 ± 1.4 cm in
untreated girls (range 1529.6 cm, NS). Beyond 2 yr of trial, treated
girls had a further height gain of 6 ± 1 cm, vs.
11.7 ± 0.8 cm in the untreated girls.
As expected, GnRH agonists blocked sexual maturation. During treatment,
peak plasma LH and FSH responses to GnRH were all at 0.5 UI/L and
0.51.2 UI/L, respectively, and estradiol was undetectable in all
samples. At 2 years, treated girls had a pubertal stage similar to or
reduced compared with the onset of treatment. Menarche occurred at
11.2 ± 0.5 yr in untreated and 12.8 ± 0.6 yr in treated
girls, i.e. an average of 1.5 yr after discontinuation of
therapy. Since then, all girls have had normal menstrual cycles.
Mean final height of the treated girls at 6 yr of follow-up was
157.6 ± 3.9 cm, higher but not significantly different from the
156.1 ± 5.3 cm observed in the untreated. In the overall cohort,
a weak positive correlation was found between final height and height
at onset of study (r = 0.48, P = 0.007), as well
as with predicted height (r = 0.50, P = 0.004) and
target height (r = 0.44, P = 0.015). A weak
negative correlation was observed in all girls between final height and
LH peak at GnRH test (r = -0.36, P = 0.046).
There was no correlation between final height and chronological age,
bone age at onset, or birth length. The difference between final height
and height predicted before treatment averaged 3.4 ± 0.9 cm and
0.9 ± 1.1 cm, respectively, in the treated and untreated groups
The final difference of adult height between the two groups was 1.44 cm
(-2.08 to +4.97 cm).
Multiple regression analysis revealed that adult height was only
independently influenced by height at the start of treatment
(P = 0.04).
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Discussion
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GnRH agonist therapy appears to improve final height in girls with
onset of puberty before 6 yr of age (8), an observation based both on
the improvement of predicted height in treated patients and on a
retrospective comparison with untreated historical controls (8). This
suggests that agonist administration can reduce the untoward effect of
very early puberty on final height. When precocious puberty occurs
later, between 6 and 8 yr of age, the magnitude of the height benefit
due to GnRH agonists remains debatable. Thirty-four girls who
started deslorelin at 7.2 yr of age and 11.6 yr of bone age reached
157 ± 5.9 cm, an average of 6.4 cm below their target height
(14). In another GnRH agonist study, average adult stature was 154.7 cm
in patients whose mean predicted height was 151.7 cm and whose target
height was 159.9 cm (15). A retrospective review used historical (and
possibly heterogeneous) controls collected in various centers with no
guarantee of exhaustivity (7). The degree of sexual maturation of the
skeleton at initiation and after GnRH therapy is likely to play an
important role in the reported results. Bone age at start of therapy
was more than 3 yr in advance of chronological age in three studies (7, 16, 14), vs. only 1.5 yr in the present trial.
Onset of breast development occurred at 10 yr in caucasian girls
recently studied in the United States (10), an age close to that
indicated in textbooks (1).
Our study deliberately selected girls with their first signs of puberty
occurring after 8 yr, the commonly used threshold for defining
precocious puberty (1), and whose bone age advance was only 1.5 yr. Our
results were comparable with those obtained in a nonrandomized subset
of girls with advanced puberty diagnosed after 8 yr (5). Those
patients, treated for 2.4 yr with triptorelin at a dose similar to
ours, reached a mean final stature of 157.4 ± 1.2 cm, 99% of
their target height. The results of the few studies performed in girls
of this age group are summarized in Table 2
. Despite variations in treatment
duration and regimens and the relative heterogeneity of treated
cohorts, the overall results did not support a clear effect of GnRH on
the final stature of girls with advanced puberty. In the absence of
control groups, however, this conclusion has remained in question by
many endocrinologists, who are still inclined to use GnRH agonists to
maintain the height prognosis.
The current data establish that triptorelin administration for 2 yr
does not increase final height significantly (1.44 cm) in a subset of
caucasian girls with advanced puberty. Additional studies are required
to test if, in some situations of combination of height SDS
(extremely short girls) and skeletal age, such therapy may nevertheless
be useful.
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Acknowledgments
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We thank Dr. N. Lahlou and the biochemistry lab for routine
hormone measurements.
Received March 15, 1999.
Revised June 2, 1999.
Accepted June 21, 1999.
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