Title: Pediatric Endocrinology
1Pediatric Endocrinology
- Sarah Lawrence
- Division of Endocrinology
- CHEO
2Outline
- Growth/short stature
- Puberty precocious and delayed
- Disorders of Sex Development
- Diabetes
- Thyroid
3Short Stature
4Predicted Height
3 boys age 10 128 cm BA 8 BA 10 BA 12 Which
will be taller as an adult?
177 cm
168 cm
155 cm
5Midparental target height males
Father
Target Height
Mother
6Midparental target height females
Father
Target Height
Mother
7Endocrinopathy
- Based on this growth chart, what is the MOST
likely cause of this boys growth failure? - Primary hypothyroidism
- Craniopharyngioma
- Down Syndrome
- Inflammatory Bowel disease
- Scoliosis
8Chronic Disease
- Based on this growth chart, what is the MOST
likely cause of this boys growth failure? - Primary hypothyroidism
- Craniopharyngioma
- Down Syndrome
- Inflammatory Bowel disease
- Scoliosis
9Approach to Short Stature
Short Stature
Growth velocity
Target Height
Normal Variant
Pathologic
Familial Short Stature
Constitutional Delay
Proportionate
Disproportionate
Prenatal
Postnatal
Idiopathic Short Stature
IUGR
Medications
Dysmorphic syndromes
Chronic disease
Chromosomal disorders
Endocrine
10Precocious Puberty
- Presence of secondary sexual development by age
-
- 8 in a girl
- 9 in a boy
11Puberty Sequence Girls
12Puberty Sequence Males
13Approach to Precocious Puberty
Precocious Puberty
Growth Velocity
Bone Age
Normal
Increased
Normal variant
Pathological
Estrogen
Androgens
Central
Peripheral
Premature Thelarche
Premature Adrenarche
Androgens
Estrogen
14Question
- A 6 year old girl presents with pubic hair,
axillary hair and odour and mild acne. Her
growth is as shown. What is the MOST likely
cause of her precocious puberty? - Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- Benign premature thelarche
- Benign premature adrenarche
- Adrenal tumour
- Central precocious puberty
15Question
- A 6.5 year old girl presents with a 10 month
history of breasts and pubic hair. What is the
MOST likely cause? - Benign premature thelarche
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- Craniopharyngioma
- Ovarian tumour
- Idiopathic central precocious puberty
16Approach to Precocious Puberty Females
Bone age, GV
Normal
Increased
Normal Variant
Pathological
Estrogen
Androgens
Central
Peripheral
Premature
Premature
Estrogen
Estrogen
Androgens
Thelarche
Adrenarche
/- androgens
Ovary
Ovary
Adrenal
Adrenal
Other
Other
17Question
CAH 29/01/92
- A 5 year old boy presents with pubic hair, growth
acceleration. He has Tanner 4 pubic hair and
genitalia with 2 ml testes. What is the MOST
likely diagnosis? - Idiopathic central puberty
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- Hypothalamic tumour
- Testicular tumour
x
18Approach to Precocious Puberty Males
Bone age, GV
Normal
Increased
Normal Variant
Pathological
Androgens
Central
Peripheral
Premature
Testes gt 4ml
Androgens
Estrogen
Adrenarche
Testes
Testes
Adrenal
Adrenal
Other
Other
19Delayed Puberty
- Absence of secondary sexual development by age
-
- 13 in a girl
- 14 in a boy
20Approach to Delayed Puberty
Delayed Puberty
LH, FSH
Low
High
Central
Peripheral
Constitutional Delay
Hypothalamic or
Gonadal Failure
of Growth and Puberty
Pituitary Cause
21Delayed Puberty Investigations
- Growth records
- Bone age
- LH, FSH
- Sex hormone levels - not needed
- Other hormones as clinically indicated (T4, TSH,
GH, Prolactin, Cortisol)
22Delayed Puberty Treatment
- Hyper / Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism
- Boys
- Testosterone intramuscular injection, transdermal
patch/gel or orally, gradually increasing to
adult doses - Girls
- Start with low dose estrogen, increasing over 1-2
years, then begin cycling with estrogen and
progesterone
23Ambiguous Genitalia (Disorders of Sex Development)
46 XY
46 XX
46 XY
46 XY
24Development of Internal and External Genitalia
- http//www.aboutkidshealth.ca/En/HowTheBodyWorks/S
exDevelopmentAnOverview/Pages/default.aspx
25Approach to Disorders of Sex Development
Gonads palpable
No
Unilateral
Bilateral
Probable virilized female 46 XX DSD
Hypospadias
Undervirilized male 46 XY DSD
Ovotesticular DSD
Maternal
Fetal
Hormonal
Hypospadias
Mixed Gonadal
Likely CAH
Testosterone
Dysgenesis
Synthesis Defect
5-a-reductase deficiency
Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (AIS)
Genetic syndrome
26Type 1 Diabetes
27Epidemiology of Type 1
- Prevalence 0.4 of individuals lt 18 years
- Increased risk to family members
- Sibling 5
- Father with diabetes 6-8
- Mother with diabetes 2-3
- Identical twin 30-50
28Diagnostic Criteria
- FBG gt 7.0 mmol/L OR
- Casual BG gt 11.1 with symptoms OR
- 2 hour BG in OGTT of gt 11.1
- Pediatrics do not need confirmatory sample on
another day in the presence of unequivocal
hyperglycemia and symptoms.
29Medical Encounters within 7 Days of Dx
of Patients
48
p0.0002
41
Number of medical encounters
H Bui et al
30BG Targets
31HbA1c BG levels
32DKA How common is it?
- At diagnosis of diabetes
- 15-67 present with DKA
- Established diabetes
- 1-10 of patients/year
- Cerebral edema
- 0.4-1 of episodes of DKA
- 25 mortality, up to 35 with severe neurologic
deficits
33Cerebral Edema in DKA
- Who is at risk?
- Increased risk in new onset DM, more dehydrated
and acidotic patients - ?treatment factors rapid infusion of
hypo-osmolar fluids, use of bicarbonate - Treatment early intervention is key
- Raise HOB, intubate, reduce fluids
- hypertonic saline, mannitol
34DKA What you need to remember
- The best way to prevent CE-DKA is to prevent DKA
- How do you prevent cerebral edema once child
presents in DKA? - By remembering a few guiding principles
- The younger the child, the greater the risk
- No insulin bolus
- No fluid bolus, unless in shock (max 10 cc/kg
over 20-30 minutes)
35Complication Screening
36Type 2 Diabetes in Children and Youth
37Presentation of T1DM vs T2DM
38Acanthosis Nigricans
39For Children, BMI Changes with Age
BMI
BMI
Boys 2 to 20 years
Example 95th Percentile Tracking Age
BMI 2 yrs 19.3 4 yrs 17.8 9 yrs
21.0 13 yrs 25.1
BMI
BMI
40Metabolic Syndrome in Youth by BMI
with Metabolic Syndrome
BMI Percentile
41Genetic and Environmental Risk factors for T2DM
- Ethnicity
- Female gender
- Family history T2DM
- Intrauterine factors
- Maternal history of gestational diabetes
- Large for gestational age (gt4 kg)
- Small for gestational age (lt2.5 kg)
- Obesity
- Sedentary behaviour
42Question
- A 13 year old boy with a BMI of 30, acanthosis
nigricans, and a family history of Type 2
diabetes presents with a random glucose of 15
mmol/L, negative ketones. - A What is the medication of first choice?
- B What is the target A1c?
43Treatment of T2DM in Youth
- Diabetes education for the family
- Setting glycemic targets
- HbA1c lt 7.0
- Lifestyle modification
- lt10 achieve glycemic targets
- Pharmacotherapy
- Metformin has been shown to have short term
efficacy and safety in adolescents - Insulin rescue is required in those with severe
metabolic decompensation at diagnosis - e.g. DKA, A1C 9.0, symptoms of severe
hyperglycemia, ketonuria
44Thyroid Disorders
45Approach to Goitre
Goitre
TSH
Elevated
Normal
Suppressed
Hypothyroid
Euthyroid
Hyperthyroid
Thyroid Antibodies
Thyroid Antibodies
Thyroid Antibodies
Grave's disease,
ve
-ve
ve
-ve
Chronic lymphocytic
Goitrogen,
Chronic lymphocytic
Colloid goitre
Subacute thyroiditis Toxic nodule
thyroiditis
Dyshormonogenesis
thyroiditis
46Thyroid take home points
- Thyroid disorders are common in children and
adolescents - Most commonly present with goitre secondary to
autoimmune thyroiditis or a simple colloid goitre - TSH and thyroid antibodies is usually all that is
required to establish the diagnosis
47Thyroid take home points
- The normal range of TSH may be higher in the
pediatric population leading to
over-investigation /diagnosis and treatment of
thyroid disorders - Mild elevations of TSH should be verified on
repeat testing - TSH lt10mU/L often normal on repeat
- Routine monitoring q6 months while growing, q
year once adult height
48Thyroid take home points
- Congenital hypothyroidism detected through
newborn screening they need more intensive
monitoring particularly in the 1st 3 years of
life - Natural history studies suggest a high rate of
spontaneous resolution with autoimmune thyroid
disease and thus, repeat testing should be done
before committing to lifelong thyroid hormone
replacement
49Questions?
50Insulin Dose Adjustment Guidelines for
Intercurrent Illness
TDD Total Daily Dose given as NovoRapid or
Humalog q4h in addition to usual insulin dose
51Constitutional Delay of Growth and Puberty