Hexarelin as a test of pituitary reserve in patients with pituitary disease.
Korbonits. M M; Kaltsas. G G; Perry. L A LA; Grossman. A B AB; Monson. J P JP; Besser. G M GM; Trainer. P J PJ
Key Findings
- Hexarelin produced a significantly higher GH peak than insulin‑induced hypoglycaemia (67.1 vs 26.9 mU/L).
- GH response to hexarelin strongly correlated with IGF‑I levels and predicted a subnormal GH response on the standard insulin tolerance test.
- Cortisol responses to hexarelin were lower and did not reliably indicate adrenal reserve, making it a poor test for ACTH/cortisol function.
Practical Outcomes
- Hexarelin could serve as a safer, first‑line screening tool for adult growth‑hormone deficiency, especially when an insulin tolerance test is unsafe or contraindicated. It should not be used to assess cortisol or adrenal health. The study used an IV dose of 2 µg/kg, so any self‑experimentation would require medical supervision and careful dosing considerations.
Summary
Hexarelin, a peptide that makes the pituitary release growth hormone, gave a much bigger GH spike than the traditional insulin‑induced test and matched well with IGF‑1 levels, meaning it can flag people who are GH‑deficient. However, it didn’t reliably show how the adrenal glands (cortisol) are working, so it isn’t useful for that purpose.
Abstract
The insulin tolerance test (ITT) is the reference standard for the diagnosis of cortisol and growth hormone (GH) deficiency, but problems have occurred in small children in inexperienced hands and it is contraindicated in patients with cardiac disease and epilepsy. Hexarelin is a growth hormone-releasing peptide with GH-, ACTH/cortisol- and prolactin-releasing effects which involve both hypothalamic and direct pituitary mechanisms. We therefore investigated whether it could be used to test GH and ACTH/cortisol reserve in patients with pituitary disease. The changes in GH and cortisol in response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia (intravenous human Actrapid 0.15 IU/kg) and hexarelin (2 microg/kg) in 19 patients with possible pituitary disease (5 males, mean age 39 years, range 21-70) were compared. The patients' responses during the hexarelin test were also compared to normal ranges of GH and cortisol responses established in healthy volunteers following hexarelin administration. GH peak levels were significantly higher after hexarelin than after hypoglycaemia (mean +/- SEM; 67.1 +/- 16 vs. 26.9 +/- 6.8 mU/l respectively; P < 0. 001), while cortisol levels were significantly lower (420 +/- 34 vs. 605 +/- 50 nmol/l; P < 0.001). The peak responses of both hormones correlated significantly between the hexarelin and insulin-induced hypoglycaemia tests (r = 0.80, P < 0.001 for cortisol). Peak GH levels after hexarelin and ITT showed a significant positive correlation with IGF-I levels (r = 0.84 and r = 0.77, P < 0.001 for both). All patients with a subnormal GH response to hexarelin (<41.4 mU/l) had a peak GH response to ITT of <9 mU/l, and only one patient had a normal (although borderline) response to hexarelin with a subnormal GH response to the ITT. Although 17 of the 19 patients had corresponding cortisol responses to hexarelin and the ITT test (either failing or passing both), two patients had normal cortisol responses to hexarelin but subnormal responses to the ITT. A peak serum cortisol level following hypoglycaemia of >580 nmol/l is indicative of normal cortisol reserve, as established in patients undergoing surgery; only five of the normal volunteers and one of the thirteen patients with a normal ACTH/cortisol reserve on ITT had a peak cortisol >580 nmol/l in response to hexarelin. Adult patients who have a subnormal peak GH response to hexarelin are likely to be GH deficient on an insulin tolerance test. However, our data suggest that the hexarelin test is not a useful test of ACTH/cortisol reserve. The hexarelin test could be a useful first/screening test to diagnose adult GH deficiency, particularly in patients in whom an insulin tolerance test is contraindicated or who are already ACTH deficient and in whom the GH reserve alone is of interest.
Study Information
pubmed
1999
1999-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1046/j.1365-2265.1999.00828.x
23
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