Blood pressure in girls with central precocious puberty receiving GnRH analogue therapy
Author:
Fisch-Shvalb Naama12ORCID, Alfandary-Harani Hadas23, Lazar Liora12, Davidovits Miriam2, Shvalb Nir4, Demol-Eliaz Sharon12, Yackobovitch-Gavan Michal15, de Vries Liat12
Affiliation:
1. National Center for Childhood Diabetes, Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel , The Jesse Z. and Lea Shafer Institute of Endocrinology and Diabetes , Petach Tikva , Israel 2. Sackler Faculty of Medicine , Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel 3. Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel , Institute of Nephrology , Petach Tikva , Israel 4. Faculty of Engineering , Ariel University , Ariel , Israel 5. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health, Sackler Faculty of Medicine , Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Case reports show hypertension in children treated with GnRH analogues for central precocious puberty (CPP). However, relevant data on blood pressure are scarce. We aimed to evaluate blood pressure (BP) among girls with idiopathic CPP and early-onset puberty before and during GnRH analogue therapy; and to examine associations of blood pressure with clinical parameters.
Methods
For this retrospective longitudinal cohort study, demographic, anthropometric, clinical, and laboratory data were collected from electronic files. The study group included 112 girls with idiopathic CPP or early-onset puberty followed in a tertiary pediatric endocrinology institute, and a control group of 37 healthy pre-pubertal girls. The main outcome measures were BP percentile, before, and during treatment with GnRH analogue.
Results
At baseline, similar proportions of the study and control groups had BP values>90th percentile: 64 (53 %) and 17 (46 %), respectively (p=0.57). The mean systolic and diastolic BP percentiles measured under treatment remained unchanged. In the study group, baseline BP>90th percentile compared to normal baseline BP was associated with lower birthweight and a higher body mass index-standard deviation score: 2,821 ± 622 vs. 3,108 ± 485 g and 1.0 ± 0.7 vs. 0.70 ± 0.8, respectively, p=0.01 for both.
Conclusions
GnRH analogue therapy for precocious or early puberty was not associated with increased blood pressure. The stability of mean blood pressure percentile during treatment is reassuring.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Reference30 articles.
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