Safety Profile of Insulin Like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-I) Administration in Adolescents
Brief Summary
The purpose of this study was to determine whether giving insulin like growth factor-I (IGF-I) to adolescent low weight girls is safe and whether this increases levels of bone formation markers.
Detailed Description
Adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN) are at high risk for low bone mineral density at a time when healthy adolescents are rapidly accruing bone, with implications for peak bone mass and fracture risk in later life. They are also deficient in insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), the bone trophic factor made in the liver in response to growth hormone (GH), despite elevated levels GH. It is possible that deficiency of IGF-I, a hormone very important for the maintenance of skeletal integrity, may contribute to the severe osteopenia seen in AN. The physiologic effects of rhIGF-I treatment in adolescents with AN had not been studied. The goal of this proposal was to investigate the acute effects of rhIGF-I on bone metabolism in adolescent girls with AN. Specific Aim: It was hypothesized that adolescent AN patients, being IGF-I deficient, would respond to exogenously administered rhIGF-I with elevations in biochemical indices of bone turnover. Therefore, rhIGF-I was administered to AN patients by subcutaneous injection over 10 days with concomitant measurement of indices of bone turnover, and calcium regulatory hormones.
Interventions
Primary Outcomes
Trial Information
NCT00516386
Completed
INTERVENTIONAL
PHASE1, PHASE2
Massachusetts General Hospital
December 15, 2025