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      Persisting benefits 12–18 months after discontinuation of pubertal metformin therapy in low birthweight girls

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          Abstract

          Background

          Discontinuation of metformin therapy, if started beyond menarche in adolescents or young women with hyperinsulinaemia following low birthweight, is rapidly followed by rebound deteriorations in body fat, insulin resistance and blood lipid profile.

          Objective

          We hypothesized that early commencement of metformin and its continuation throughout puberty might have more persisting benefits.

          Patients and measurements

          We followed up on a previously reported randomized study cohort at 12 months and 18 months after treatment discontinuation, including body composition by absorptiometry, fasting insulin, glucose and blood lipids. In that open-labelled, prospective study, 22 low birthweight girls with early normal puberty (Stage 2 breast development at age 8–9 years) were randomized to remain untreated ( N = 12]) or to receive metformin (850 mg/day; N = 10) for 36 months (between time –36 months to 0 month).

          Results

          The significant improvements previously reported at the end of the 36-month active treatment period in per cent body fat, abdominal fat mass, fasting insulin sensitivity, high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and triglyceride levels all persisted at follow-up 12 months after treatment discontinuation. Further anthropometry at 18 months off therapy confirmed the persistence of benefits in height, body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference in the previously metformin-exposed girls.

          Conclusion

          In low birth weight girls with early normal onset of puberty, metformin treatment for 3 years across puberty resulted in auxological, endocrine and metabolic benefits that persisted for at least 1 year after metformin withdrawal. Further follow-up and longer-term studies are needed to explore the possibility that insulin sensitization therapy during puberty might reprogramme predisposition to metabolic disease.

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          Most cited references8

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          Early puberty: rapid progression and reduced final height in girls with low birth weight.

          To assess whether, in girls with early onset of puberty, low birth weight is a risk factor for rapid progression to menarche and for short adult stature. Longitudinal clinical assessment of 54 Catalan (Northern Spanish) girls followed from early onset of puberty (onset of breast development between 8.0 and 9.0 years of age) to final height. The timing of menarche and the final height were analyzed a posteriori according to birth weight, the cutoff level between normal and low birth weight subgroups being -1.5 standard deviation (SD; approximately 2.7 kg at term birth). Normal and low birth weight girls had similar target heights and characteristics at diagnosis of early puberty. However, menarche occurred on average 1.6 years earlier in low versus normal birth weight girls (11.3 +/-.3 years vs 12.9 +/-.2 years), and final height was >5 cm shorter in low birth weight girls (parental adjusted height SD: -.6 +/-.2 cm vs.3 +/-.2 cm). The timing of menarche and the level of final height in Catalan girls with early onset of puberty was found to depend on prenatal growth. Girls with normal birth weight tend to progress slowly through puberty with a normal timing of menarche and normal final height. In contrast, girls with low birth weight tend to progress relatively rapidly to an early menarche and to a reduced final height. If these findings are confirmed in other ethnic and/or larger groups, then a subgroup has been identified that will most likely benefit from any therapeutic intervention aiming at a delay of pubertal development and/or an increase of final height.
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            Metformin treatment to prevent early puberty in girls with precocious pubarche.

            Girls with precocious pubarche (PP, pubic hair at < 8 yr of age) are at high risk for early onset and rapid progression of puberty, in particular if their prenatal growth was restrained, i.e. low birth weight (LBW), and followed by rapid postnatal catch-up of weight gain. We postulated that insulin resistance contributes to early onset and rapid progression of puberty in LBW-PP girls and thus explored the puberty-delaying effects of insulin sensitization with metformin initiated shortly after PP diagnosis. The study population consisted of 38 prepubertal LBW girls with PP attributed to exaggerated adrenarche [mean body weight, 2.4 kg; age, 7.9 yr; body mass index (BMI), 18.4 kg/m(2)]. These girls were randomly assigned to remain untreated (n = 19) or to receive metformin (n = 19; 425 mg/d) for 2 yr. Pubertal staging, age at menarche, body composition by absorptiometry, fasting insulin, glucose, lipids, leptin, IGF-I, IGF-binding protein-1, testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, and SHBG were the main outcome measures. Metformin treatment was associated with a less adipose body composition (and lower serum leptin levels) and with a 0.4-yr delay in the clinical onset of puberty (Tanner B2; 9.5 vs. 9.1 yr; P < 0.01). These findings were corroborated by a delay of at least 1 yr in the puberty-associated rise of circulating IGF-I (P < 0.01). Available results also point to a metformin-associated delay of menarche (P < 0.02). Gain in height and lean mass was not divergent between study subgroups. The efficacy of early metformin treatment in PP girls is here extended to include not only a less adipose body composition after 2 yr but also a less advanced onset of puberty, whereas height gain is maintained. These findings open the perspective that, ultimately, metformin treatment may also prove to heighten the short adult stature of LBW-PP girls.
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              A review: new thoughts on growth.

              There is a critical point in development when the size of an animal, arising from its previous plane of nutrition, determines its appetite thereafter, and hence its rate of growth and dimensions at maturity. A small size at this critical time, brought about by undernutrition, is not followed by "catch-up" growth, however liberal the diet. A full diet produces catch-up growth only if the undernutrition, whatever its cause, has occurred after this critical period is over. It can, moreover, only restore a young animal to its percentile channel of growth, and its ability to do this after long periods of undernutrition becomes progressively limited by the animals chronologic age when the catch-up growth became possible.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clin Endocrinol (Oxf)
                cen
                Clinical Endocrinology
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                0300-0664
                1365-2265
                September 2007
                : 67
                : 3
                : 468-471
                Affiliations
                [* ]Medical Research Council Epidemiology Unit Cambridge, UK
                []Department of Paediatrics, University of Cambridge Cambridge, UK
                []Endocrinology Unit, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, University of Barcelona Esplugues, Barcelona, Spain
                [§ ]Hormonal Laboratory, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, University of Barcelona Esplugues, Barcelona, Spain
                []Department of Pediatrics, University of Leuven Leuven, Belgium
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Lourdes Ibáñez, Endocrinology Unit, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, University of Barcelona, Passeig de Sant Joan de Déu 2, 08950 Esplugues, Barcelona, Spain. Tel: +34 93 2804000 ext. 2261; Fax: +34 93 2033959; E-mail: libanez@ 123456hsjdbcn.org

                There is no conflict of interests.

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2·5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                Article
                10.1111/j.1365-2265.2007.02952.x
                2040227
                17608755
                bc2849d9-69e4-49bc-a4c4-8ed713ef099b
                © 2007 The Authors Journal compilation © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                History
                : 13 April 2007
                : 11 May 2007
                : 17 May 2007
                : 17 May 2007
                Categories
                Rapid Publication

                Endocrinology & Diabetes
                Endocrinology & Diabetes

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