Continuous subcutaneous GHRH(1-29)NH2 promotes growth over 1 year in short, slowly growing children.
Brain. C E CE; Hindmarsh. P C PC; Brook. C G CG
Key Findings
- Continuous sub‑cutaneous infusion of sermorelin (60 ng/kg/min) raised growth velocity from ~4.6 cm/yr to ~7.0 cm/yr in children after 1 year.
- 24‑hour GH profiles showed sustained, pulsatile GH secretion with no sign of desensitization over the treatment period.
- Growth benefits reversed after stopping the peptide, indicating the effect is dependent on ongoing administration.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests that a low‑dose, continuous delivery of GHRH can boost GH output without causing the pituitary to become tolerant, but it requires an infusion or a future depot formulation. The study’s dosing and safety data are from children, so direct translation to adult anti‑aging protocols is uncertain and would need careful dose adjustment and medical oversight.
Summary
In a small study, giving kids with slow growth a constant tiny dose of the peptide sermorelin under the skin for up to a year made them grow faster (about 2‑3 cm more per year). Their natural GH pulses stayed strong and didn’t wear out, and when the treatment stopped, growth went back to the old rate.
Abstract
We have treated eight pre-pubertal children with partial GH insufficiency with continuous subcutaneous infusions of GHRH(1-29)NH2 at a dose of 60 ng/kg/min for periods of up to 1 year. In five children treated for 1 year, mean growth velocity increased from 4.6 cm/year (range 4.4-5.2) to 7.0 cm/year (5.7-8.7) (P = 0.04). Three children treated for 3-6 months showed similar height velocity increases. A return to pretreatment growth rates was seen after cessation of treatment in all children. Twenty-four-hour GH profiles performed at intervals of 3 months showed sustained augmentation of pulsatile GH secretion without evidence of desensitization. The presence of pulsatile GH secretion during continuous GHRH administration provides strong evidence in man for the role of somatostatin in determining GH pulse frequency. The ability of the pituitary to respond to a supramaximal bolus of GHRH remained constant during the treatment. Continuous administration of GHRH(1-29)NH2 will become a practicable treatment when formulated into a sustained release or depot preparation. We have shown this to be an effective therapy for some short, slowly growing children. Further studies are required to establish the optimal dosage regimen.
Study Information
pubmed
1990
1990-02-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2265.1990.tb00851.x
20
31