Endocrine Sequelae in 157 Pediatric Survivors of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT)

Successful rates of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) face paralleled escalation of late endocrine and metabolic effects. This work aimed to characterize these sequelae distinguishing between the underlying pathologies and treatments received. A retrospective descriptive study was condu...

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Published inJournal of the Endocrine Society Vol. 7; no. 2; p. bvac183
Main Authors Güemes, María, Martín-Rivada, Álvaro, Bascuas Arribas, Marta, Andrés-Esteban, Eva María, Molina Angulo, Blanca, Pozo Román, Jesús, Argente, Jesús
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Oxford University Press 15.12.2022
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Summary:Successful rates of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) face paralleled escalation of late endocrine and metabolic effects. This work aimed to characterize these sequelae distinguishing between the underlying pathologies and treatments received. A retrospective descriptive study was conducted in 157 children post-HSCT (hematopoietic pathology [N = 106], solid tumors [N = 40], and rare entities [N = 11]) followed at a single endocrine department between 2009 and 2019. Regression analysis was used to ascertain association. Of all patients, 58.7% presented with at least one endocrine abnormality. Endocrinopathies post HSCT were most frequently developed in lymphoblastic leukemia (60.5% of them), whereas myeloid leukemias had the fewest. A total of 64% of patients presented with primary hypogonadism, 52% short stature, and 20% obesity. Endocrinopathy was associated with older age at HSCT (9.78 years [6.25-12.25] vs 6.78 years [4.06-9.75]) ( < .005), pubertal Tanner stage V ( < .001), chronic graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) ( = .022), and direct gonadal therapy ( = .026). The incidence of endocrinopathies was higher in girls (15% more common; < .02) and in patients who received radiotherapy (18% higher), steroids (17.4% increase), allogenic HSCT (7% higher), thymoglobulin, or cyclophosphamide. Those on busulfan presented with a 27.5% higher rate of primary hypogonadism ( = .003). More than half of children surviving HSCT will develop endocrinopathies. Strikingly, obesity has risen to the third most frequent endocrine disruption, mainly due to steroids, and partly adhering to the general population tendency. Lymphoblastic leukemia was the condition with a higher rate of endocrine abnormalities. Female sex, older age at HSCT, pubertal stage, allogenic transplant, radiotherapy, alkylating drugs, and GVHD pose risk factors for endocrine disturbances.
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ISSN:2472-1972
2472-1972
DOI:10.1210/jendso/bvac183