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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Longitudinal Study on Growth and Body Mass Index before and after Diagnosis of Childhood Craniopharyngioma
N Etavard-gorrisNiels SörensenAndreas FaldumHermann L. MüllerAngela EmserUrsel GebhardtR KolbR OeverinkGina Bruhnkensubject
medicine.medical_specialtyEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismClinical BiochemistryHypothalamusPituitary neoplasmBiochemistryBody Mass IndexCraniopharyngiomaChild DevelopmentEndocrinologyRisk FactorsInternal medicinemedicineHumansNeoplasm InvasivenessPituitary NeoplasmsLongitudinal StudiesObesityRisk factorGrowth DisordersRetrospective Studiesbusiness.industryBody WeightBiochemistry (medical)Childhood CraniopharyngiomaInfantmedicine.diseaseObesityBody HeightCraniopharyngiomaEndocrinologyEl NiñoMultivariate AnalysisHypothalamic NeoplasmDisease SusceptibilitybusinessBody mass indexdescription
Abstract We analyzed whether childhood craniopharyngioma predisposes to obesity and growth impairment. Height/length, body mass index (BMI), and hypothalamic involvement were evaluated in 90 patients at standardized ages and time points before, after, and at the time of diagnosis. Relevant decreases in height sd score (SDS) started at 10–12 months of age and persisted until diagnosis of childhood craniopharyngioma. Relevant increases in BMI SDS were detectable between 4 and 5 yr of age. Postoperative BMI SDS (yr 1–6) had a weak positive correlation with BMI SDS at the time of diagnosis. In linear regression analysis, hypothalamic tumor involvement (P < 0.001), ponderal index at birth (P = 0.014), and BMI SDS at age 6–7 months (P = 0.029) and at age 5 yr (P < 0.001) had relevant and independent impacts on the development of obesity. Patients with hypothalamic involvement (n = 48) presented lower ponderal index and BMI SDS at birth and higher BMI SDS at the time of diagnosis (P < 0.001) as well as during annual follow-up (P < 0.001) compared with patients without hypothalamic involvement (n = 42). From childhood (3.5–4 yr) to the time of diagnosis, growth rates were reduced for patients with hypothalamic tumor involvement. Patients without hypothalamic involvement presented reduced growth rates in early infancy (age 10–12 months) that persisted until diagnosis. We conclude that reduced growth rates occur quite early in history; BMI SDS increases occur later and are predictive of obesity. Hypothalamic involvement is the major risk factor for obesity in patients with childhood craniopharyngioma.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2004-07-09 | The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism |