Tracking and Cumulative Lifetime Exposure to IGF-I in 6,459 Healthy Individuals and in SGA Children Treated with GH. The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism Kjaer, A. S., Jensen, R. B., Petersen, J. H., Linneberg, A., Karhus, L. L., Henriksen, L. S., Johannsen, T. H., Main, K. M., Hoffman, A. R., Juul, A. 2022

Abstract

CONTEXT: Supraphysiological serum insulin-like growth-factor-I (IGF-I) concentrations have been a matter of concern in children treated with growth hormone (GH) because high IGF-I levels were associated with risk of later disease in former epidemiological studies.OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a single IGF-I measurement reliably reflects lifetime IGF-I exposure we evaluated intraindividual longitudinal tracking of IGF-I and IGF-binding-protein-3 (IGFBP-3) levels and we estimated cumulative lifetime exposure to IGF-I in healthy and GH-treated individuals.METHODS: We included 6,459 healthy participants (cross-sectional=5,326; longitudinal=1,133) aged 0----76 years (9,963 serum samples) and nine patients born small-for-gestational-age (SGA) with 238 serum samples during GH treatment.Intraindividual tracking of IGF-I and IGFBP-3 (SDS) was determined by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). Cumulative lifetime IGF-I exposure was estimated by area under the curve of the predicted SDS-trajectory from 0-76 years.RESULTS: For IGF-I (SDS), ICCs were 0.50 (95% CI: 0.47-0.53) for male and 0.53 (0.50-0.56) for female participants. Lifetime IGF-I exposure was significantly higher in female (mean 12,723±3,691 SD) than in male participants (12,563±3,393); p=0.02. In SGA children, treatment with GH increased the lifetime exposure to IGF-I from 9,512±1,889 to 11,271±1,689, corresponding to an increase in lifetime IGF-I trajectory from -0.89 SD±0.57 to -0.35 SD±0.49.CONCLUSION: Since IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels track throughout life, a single measurement reliably reflects lifetime exposure. GH therapy increased the lifetime exposure to IGF-I only slightly and it remained below the average lifetime exposure in the reference population.

View details for DOI 10.1210/clinem/dgac605

View details for PubMedID 36250350