Changes in appetite and body weight in response to long-term oral administration of the ghrelin agonist GHRP-2 in growth hormone deficient children.
Mericq. Verónica V; Cassorla. Fernando F; Bowers. Cyril Y CY; Avila. Alejandra A; Gonen. Boas B; Merriam. George R GR
Key Findings
- 7 of 10 children reported a noticeable boost in appetite during the first 6 months.
- BMI standard deviation scores rose slightly (0.21 to 0.25) but the change was not statistically significant.
- The appetite‑stimulating effect appeared transient and did not translate into sustained weight gain.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, GHRP‑2 may give a short‑term appetite lift but isn’t reliable for long‑term weight or muscle gain. The high pediatric dose used here isn’t directly applicable to adults, and the lack of chronic BMI change suggests limited utility if the goal is sustained mass increase.
Summary
In a 12‑month study of kids who can’t grow normally, taking the ghrelin‑like peptide GHRP‑2 twice a day at a high dose made most of them feel hungrier for the first half‑year, but it didn’t lead to a clear, lasting increase in body‑mass index.
Abstract
GHRP-2 (GPA-748, Wyeth-Ayerst) is an orally active peptide growth hormone (GH) secretagogue which acts through a G-protein coupled receptor for which the natural ligand--an acylated 28 amino acid peptide, ghrelin--was recently isolated. Ghrelin and its analogs have potent GH-releasing activities, but in animal studies ghrelin also causes weight gain. As part of a study examining the effect of GHRP-2 on GH secretory dynamics and growth, we evaluated its effects on appetite and body weight. Ten prepubertal children with GH deficiency (growth velocity < or = 4 cm/year in association with a GH response to two provocative stimuli < 10 ng/ml) were included in the study. At the beginning of the study their age was 10.4 +/- 2 years (mean +/- SD), with a height of -3.8 +/- 0.1 SDS. Body mass index (BMI) was 17.9 +/- 3.6 kg/m2, and the BMI Z score 0.21 +/- 1.51 SDS. GHRP-2 was administered orally at a dose of 900 microg/kg b.i.d. for 12 months. Seven out of ten patients reported a significant increase in appetite during the first 6 months of the study. There was a tendency for the BMI SDS to increase during the study, but this increase did not reach statistical significance (0.21 +/- 1.5 vs 0.25 +/- 1.5 SDS). These results suggest that at a dose of 900 microg/kg b.i.d., GHRP-2 appears to have a transient stimulatory effect on appetite, but does not have a chronic clinically significant effect on BMI in children with GH deficiency.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
10.1515/jpem.2003.16.7.981