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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Growth hormone replacement in adults:Real-world data from two large studies in US and Europe
Beverly M. K. BillerVera Popovic-brkicGediminas PurasMark E. MolitchMurray B. GordonNatalia HolotCharlotte HöybyeJens Otto Lunde JørgensenVlady OstrowMatthias M. WeberAlberto Pietropolisubject
AdultMale0301 basic medicineIGF-I SDSPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyWaistHormone Replacement TherapyEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismANSWER Program030209 endocrinology & metabolismEffectivenessGrowth hormoneNordiNet® International Outcome Study (IOS)Body compositionHypopituitarismBody Mass IndexGrowth hormone deficiency03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyElectric ImpedancemedicineHumansGrowth hormone replacementAgedAdult patientsHuman Growth Hormonebusiness.industryMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseRecombinant ProteinsUnited StatesReal-world dataEuropeClinical Practice030104 developmental biologyGrowth hormone deficiency in adultsBaseline characteristicsBody CompositionFemaleWaist CircumferenceSafetybusinessReal world dataBody mass indexdescription
Objective: This report describes the effectiveness and safety of growth hormone replacement in 3180 adult patients with growth hormone deficiency followed-up for 0.0–12.2 years in two completed, complementary, non-interventional, multicentre studies, NordiNet® International Outcome Study (IOS) (NCT00960128) and the American Norditropin® Studies: Web-Enabled Research (ANSWER) Program (NCT01009905). Design: In both studies, Norditropin® (somatropin; Novo Nordisk A/S, Denmark) was administered at the discretion of the treating physician and according to routine practice. We present data on baseline characteristics, growth hormone dose, safety data and change from baseline in waist circumference, body mass index and bioimpedance (NordiNet® IOS only). Results: Mean (SD) baseline characteristics (effectiveness analysis set) in NordiNet® IOS (n = 971) and ANSWER (n = 304): females, 45%; 69%; mean growth hormone dose (mg/day) (female, 0.338 [0.177]; male, 0.289 [0.157]); (female, 0.501 [0.313]; male, 0.505 [0.351]). Most patients had BMI ≥25 kg/m2. Median (P10,P90) exposure (females, 3.5 [0.42,11.0]; 1.6 [3.2; 0.3,8.6]; males, 4.1 [0.33,10.8]; 2.3 [2.9; 0.0,7.5] years). Mean (SD) change from baseline for waist circumference (−0.46 [6.38] cm [n = 403], BMI (0.30 [3.30] kg/m2 [n = 857]) and bioimpedance (−17.4 (59.19) ohm [n = 239]) were associated with growth hormone dose (waist/bioimpedance) and duration of follow-up (BMI/bioimpedance). No new safety signals were observed among patients in the full analysis set (NordiNet® IOS, n = 2321; ANSWER, n = 859). Conclusions: Long-term growth hormone replacement is associated with an improvement in body composition. The accumulated data from >10 years of follow-up support the long-term effectiveness and safety of growth hormone replacement as prescribed in clinical practice.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-02-01 |