作者
Ling Hou,Ke Huang,Chunxiu Gong,Feihong Luo,Haiyan Wei,Liyang Liang,Hongwei Du,Jianping Zhang,Yan Zhong,Ruimin Chen,Xinran Chen,Jiayan Pan,Xianjiang Jin,Ting Zeng,Wei Liao,Deyun Liu,Dan Lan,Shunye Zhu,Zhiya Dong,Huamei Ma,Yu Yang,Feng Xiong,Ping Lu,Sheng-Quan Cheng,Xuefan Gu,Runming Jin,Yu Liu,Jinzhun Wu,Xu Xu,Linqi Chen,Qin Dong,Hui Pan,Zhe Su,Lijun Liu,Xiaomin Luo,Shining Ni,Zhihong Chen,Yuhua Hu,Chunlin Wang,Jing Liu,Li Liu,Biao Lü,Xiaodong Wang,Yunfeng Wang,Fan Yang,Manyan Zhang,Lizhi Cao,Geli Liu,Hui Yao,Zhan Yue-hua,Mingjuan Dai,Guimei Li,Li Li,Yanjie Liu,Kan Wang,Yanfeng Xiao,Qian Zhang,Junhua Dong,Zaiyan Gu,Lirong Ying,Feng Huang,Yanling Liu,Zheng Liu,Ye Jin,Dongmei Zhao,Xu Hu,Zhi‐Hong Jiang,Kan Ye,Hong Zhu,Shaoke Chen,Xiaobo Chen,Naijun Wan,Zuojun Xu,Qingjin Yin,Hongxiao Zhang,Huang Xiao-dong,Jianying Yin,Huifeng Zhang,Pin Li,Ping Yin,Junfen Fu,Xiaoping Luo
摘要
Abstract Context The evidence of long-term polyethylene glycol recombinant human GH (PEG-rhGH) in pediatric GH deficiency (GHD) is limited. Objective This study aimed to examine the effectiveness and safety of long-term PEG-rhGH in children with GHD in the real world, as well as to examine the effects of dose on patient outcomes. Design A prospective, observational, posttrial study (NCT03290235). Setting, participants and intervention Children with GHD were enrolled from 81 centers in China in 4 individual clinical trials and received weekly 0.2 mg/kg/wk (high-dose) or 0.1 to <0.2 mg/kg/wk (low-dose) PEG-rhGH for 30 months. Main outcomes measures Height SD score (Ht SDS) at 12, 24, and 36 months. Results A total of 1170 children were enrolled in this posttrial study, with 642 patients in the high-dose subgroup and 528 in the low-dose subgroup. The Ht SDS improved significantly after treatment in the total population (P < 0.0001), with a mean change of 0.53 ± 0.30, 0.89 ± 0.48, 1.35 ± 0.63, 1.63 ± 0.75 at 6 months, 12 months, 24 months, and 36 months, respectively. In addition, the changes in Ht SDS from baseline were significantly improved in the high-dose subgroup compared with the low-dose subgroup at 6, 12, 24, and 36 months after treatment (all P < 0.05). A total of 12 (1.03%) patients developed serious adverse events. There was no serious adverse event related to the treatment, and no AEs leading to treatment discontinuation or death occurred. Conclusions PEG-rhGH showed long-term effectiveness and safety in treating children with GHD. Both dose subgroups showed promising outcomes, whereas PEG-rhGH 0.2 mg/kg/wk might show additional benefit.