Diagnosis and Incidence of Congenital Combined Pituitary Hormone Deficiency in Denmark - A National Observational Study

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  • Louise Kjersgaard Jakobsen
  • Jensen, Rikke Bodin Beck
  • Niels Holtum Birkebæk
  • Dorte Hansen
  • Ann-Margrethe Rønholt Christensen
  • Maja Carsting Bjerrum
  • Henrik Thybo Christesen

CONTEXT: Congenital combined pituitary hormone deficiency (cCPHD) is the loss of ≥2 pituitary hormones caused by congenital factors.

OBJECTIVE: We aimed to estimate the national incidence of cCPHD diagnosed before age 18 years and in subgroups.

METHODS: Patients with cCPHD were identified in the Danish National Patient Registry and Danish hospital registries in the period 1996-2020. Hospital files were reviewed and incidences calculated using background population data. Incidence was the main outcome measure.

RESULTS: We identified 128 patients with cCPHD; 88 (68.8%) were males. The median (range) age at diagnosis was 6.2 (0.01-19.0) years. The median (25th;75th percentile) number of hormone deficiencies at diagnosis was 3 (3; 4) at <1 year vs 2 (2; 2) at 1-17 years, P < .0001. Abnormal pituitary magnetic resonance imaging findings were seen in 70.3% (83/118). For those born in Denmark aged <18 years at diagnosis (n = 116/128) the estimated national incidence (95% CI) of cCPHD was 10.34 (7.79-13.72) per 100 000 births, with an annual incidence rate of 5.74 (4.33-7.62) per million. In subgroup analysis (diagnosis <1 vs 1-17 years), the incidence was highest in the 1-17 years subgroup, 7.97 (5.77-11.00) vs 1.98 (1.39-2.84) per 100 000 births, whereas the annual incidence rate was highest at <1 year, 19.8 (13.9-28.4) vs 4.69 (3.39-6.47) per million births.

CONCLUSION: cCPHD had the highest incidence rate and the most hormone deficiencies in those diagnosed at <1 year. The incidence was highest in the 1-17 years age group, underscoring the need for multiple pituitary hormone investigations throughout childhood and adolescence in children with only 1 hormone deficiency.

Original languageEnglish
JournalThe Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Volume108
Issue number10
Pages (from-to)2475-2485
Number of pages11
ISSN0021-972X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.

    Research areas

  • Male, Child, Female, Adolescent, Humans, Infant, Child, Preschool, Incidence, Hypopituitarism/diagnosis, Pituitary Hormones, Denmark/epidemiology

ID: 386608581