Children with growth hormone deficiency who failed to respond adequately to GHRH therapy showed excellent growth responses when switched to recombinant growth hormone treatment over an average of 51 months. Their first-year growth on GH therapy was inversely correlated with how well they had responded to provocative GHRH testing, meaning those with the poorest GHRH responses benefited most from direct GH treatment. This confirms that GH replacement is an effective alternative for children whose GH deficiency stems from pituitary problems rather than hypothalamic GHRH deficiency alone.
Saenger, P; Pescovitz, O H; Bercu, B B; Murray, F T; Landy, H; Brentzel, J; O'Dea, L; Hanson, B; Howard, C; Reiter, E O