Response to GH Treatment After Radiation Therapy Depends on Location of Irradiation

Author:

Rose Susan R1ORCID,Carlsson Martin2ORCID,Grimberg Adda3ORCID,Aydin Ferah4,Albanese Assunta5ORCID,Hokken-Koelega Anita C S67,Camacho-Hubner Cecilia2

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio

2. Pfizer Inc., Endocrine Care, New York, New York

3. Perelman School of Medicine, Univ. of Pennsylvania, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

4. Pfizer Health AB, Endocrine Care, Sollentuna, Sweden

5. St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

6. Dutch Growth Research Foundation, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

7. Erasmus University Medical Center, Sophia’s Children’s Hospital, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Endocrinology, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Cancer survivors with GH deficiency (GHD) receive GH therapy (GHT) after 1+ year observation to ensure stable tumor status/resolution. Hypothesis Radiation therapy (RT) to brain, spine, or extremities alters growth response to GHT. Aim Identify differences in growth response to GHT according to type/location of RT. Methods The Pfizer International Growth Database was searched for cancer survivors on GHT for ≥5 years. Patient data, grouped by tumor type, were analyzed for therapy (surgery, chemotherapy, RT of the focal central nervous system, cranial, craniospinal, or total body irradiation [TBI] as part of bone marrow transplantation), sex, peak stimulated GH, age at GHT start, and duration from RT to GHT start. Kruskal-Wallis test and quantile regression modeling were performed. Results Of 1149 GHD survivors on GHT for ≥5 years (male 733; median age 8.4 years; GH peak 2.8 ng/mL), 431 had craniopharyngioma (251, cranial RT), 224 medulloblastoma (craniospinal RT), 134 leukemia (72 TBI), and 360 other tumors. Median age differed by tumor group (P < 0.001). Five-year delta height SD score (SDS) (5-year ∆HtSDS; median [10th-90th percentile]) was greatest for craniopharyngioma, 1.6 (0.3-3.0); for medulloblastoma, 5-year ∆HtSDS 0.9 (0.0-1.9); for leukemia 5-year ∆HtSDS, after TBI (0.3, 0-0.7) versus without RT (0.5, 0-0.9), direct comparison P < 0.001. Adverse events included 40 treatment-related, but none unexpected. Conclusions TBI for leukemia had significant impact on growth response to GHT. Medulloblastoma survivors had intermediate GHT response, whereas craniopharyngioma cranial RT did not alter GHT response. Both craniospinal and epiphyseal irradiation negatively affect growth response to GH therapy compared with only cranial RT or no RT.

Funder

Pfizer

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Endocrinology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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