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Effects of Growth Hormone (GH) Deficiency and Growth Hormone Replacement on Serum Fibroblast Growth Factor 21 (FGF21)

U

University of Liverpool

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Growth Hormone Deficiency

Treatments

Drug: Growth Hormone Replacement Therapy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT02243852
13/NW/0075

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will recruit healthy controls (who have normal GH production and growth hormone levels) and patients identified as having GHD, who are deemed eligible for GH replacement therapy according to NICE guidelines. The patients recruited will have been identified as starting on GH by their referring clinicians and a decision made on their replacement therapy prior to their potential enrollment in the study. The study, or its research team, will have no influence on the decision as to whether a patient will start on GH, or on which of the many GH formulations that the patients receives. The proposed study is an observational study to determine how GH affects the plasma levels of Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) in response to treatment; and whether the change in FGF21 mirrors the improvement in body composition/fat deposition. FGF21 is a metabolic regulator that acts on multiple tissues to coordinate carbohydrate and lipid metabolism and regulate energy balance.

We hypothesize that FGF-21 is expressed and secreted from liver and skeletal muscle in humans in response to growth hormone administration and that levels may be reduced in patients with GHD compared with healthy controls. Furthermore, we believe that the beneficial effects of long-term GH replacement on body composition (reduction in visceral adipose tissue, subcutaneous adipose tissue and liver fat), on improvement in lipid profiles and on skeletal muscle mitochondrial function involve GH-induced release of FGF21.

Full description

Growth hormone (GH) is involved in controlling people's general health and an underproduction of growth hormone (growth hormone deficiency or GHD) leads to people feeling generally unwell and having a lower feeling of well-being and quality of life scores. In addition, the investigators, and others, have demonstrated people with GHD have reduced muscle and bone strength and a greater storage of fat, particularly in unfavourable sites such as in the liver and within the abdomen (visceral fat), rather than beneath the skin (subcutaneous fat).

Treatment of GHD is achieved by administration of GH replacement therapy, given as a once daily subcutaneous injection, which generally reverses these symptoms. Due to its high cost, patients are only started on GH replacement depending on the impact that the GHD is having on their quality of life. Patients must be severely affected to be eligible for replacement therapy. Patients are screened for quality of life using a well validated, disease specific questionnaire (AGHDA, Adult Growth hormone deficiency questionnaire) and there are specific criteria that govern whether a patient with GHD warrants GH replacement and also whether they continue treatment (NICE guideline: Growth hormone deficiency (adults) - human growth hormone (TA64)).

This study will specifically determine whether the mechanism of action by which GH exerts its beneficial effects on metabolism (within adipose tissue and skeletal muscle) involves changes in serum FGF21 concentrations.

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

All evaluations to determine eligibility into the study and for growth hormone replacement are performed as part of routine clinical care. It should be emphasised that no research specific screening tests will be performed. Patients deemed eligible for entry into study, who decline to participate in the research, will still be commenced on growth hormone in line routine clinical care.

Inclusion criteria: Patients with confirmed GH deficiency who are deemed eligible for GH replacement as assessed by the AGHDA QOL questionnaire.

Exclusion criteria: Claustrophobia or having significant metal work is a contra-indication to MRI scanning.

Withdrawal criteria: Patients will be withdrawn from the study if they discontinue their growth hormone replacement therapy for any clinical reason.

Trial design

0 participants in 3 patient groups

Growth Hormone Deficiency (n=16)
Description:
16 asymptomatic GHD patients (who have confirmed GHD but who remain without GH replacement) will be compared with 16 healthy controls. Participants will be asked to undertake a single fasting blood sample and an MRI scan (whole body MRI and proton- and phosphorus-MR spectroscopy) to determine VAT, SAT and liver fat and muscle mitochondrial function. FGF21, body composition and mitochondrial function will be assessed in each of cohort to determine the correlation of FGF21 levels with VAT, SAT and liver fat.
Healthy Controls (n=16)
Description:
16 healthy controls will be compared with 16 asymptomatic GHD patients (who have confirmed GHD but who remain without GH replacement). Participants will be asked to undertake a single fasting blood sample and an MRI scan (whole body MRI and proton- and phosphorus-MR spectroscopy) to determine VAT, SAT and liver fat and muscle mitochondrial function. FGF21, body composition and mitochondrial function will be measured in all cohorts to determine the correlation of FGF21 levels with VAT, SAT and liver fat.
Growth Hormone Replacement Therapy (n=16)
Description:
GHD patients, who are eligible for GH replacement therapy as part of their routine clinical care, according to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) recommendations, based on the biochemical deficiency and the appropriate AGHDA questionnaire score (AGHDA score\>11) will be recruited. These patients attend the Joint Endocrine clinic at University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, and those who are about to commence growth hormone replacement will be asked to participate in this observational study. Anthropometric, biochemical including measurement of FGF21 and MR evaluation will be carried out in patients who are to be treated with GH as part of their routine clinical care immediately prior to GH therapy and after six months of replacement treatment. The type of GH and dose of treatment will be at the discretion of the treating physician. Standard doses will be used and patients will remain under the care of the supervising
Treatment:
Drug: Growth Hormone Replacement Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Daniel J Cuthbertson, PhD; Victoria S Sprung, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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