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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Vol 53, 806-809, Copyright © 1981 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Lack of response of nonsuppressible insulin-like activity to short term administration of human growth hormone in thalassemia major

GA Werther, RN Matthews, HG Burger and AC Herington

We have recently demonstrated that nonsuppressible insulin-like activity (NSILA-S) is very low or undetectable in beta-thalassemia major. The mechanism for this deficiency has been proposed to result from a defect at the GH receptor level or at a site distal to the receptor in the pathway leading to NSILA-S generation. To study this proposal further, the NSILA-S response to exogenous human GH (hGH) was assessed in six affected subjects (aged 12-20 yr), four of whom were on or below the third percentile for height and three of whom were prepubertal. On the basis of immunoreactive and receptor-active hGH responses to exercise, GH deficiency as a primary cause of low NSILA-S levels was essentially ruled out in five of the six patients. hGH (5 mg) was administered im daily for 3 days. Bioassayable NSILA-S failed to rise normally in response to the exogenous hGH in four of the six subjects. In the other two, a limited response was seen only on day 4, reaching 54% and 29%, respectively, of the mean peak response in normal adults. The impaired production of NSILA-S in thalassemia major thus appears to be due to hGH insensitivity and not to a biologically inactive endogenous hGH molecule. These results confirm that the site of the defect may therefore be at the membrane receptor for hGH or at a subsequent step in the NSILA-S synthetic pathway, perhaps related to excessive hepatic iron deposition. These results also suggest that in subjects where the defect is partial, treatment of their short stature with hGH may be beneficial.


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N. F. Olivieri and G. M. Brittenham
Iron-Chelating Therapy and the Treatment of Thalassemia
Blood, February 1, 1997; 89(3): 739 - 761.
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