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15
result(s) for
"Grinspon, Romina P"
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Androgen Treatment in Adolescent Males With Hypogonadism
2020
During adolescence, androgens are responsible for the development of secondary sexual characteristics, pubertal growth, and the anabolic effects on bone and muscle mass. Testosterone is the most abundant testicular androgen, but some effects are mediated by its conversion to the more potent androgen dihydrotestosterone (DHT) or to estradiol. Androgen deficiency, requiring replacement therapy, may occur due to a primary testicular failure or secondary to a hypothalamic–pituitary disorder. A very frequent condition characterized by a late activation of the gonadal axis that may also need androgen treatment is constitutional delay of puberty. Of the several testosterone or DHT formulations commercially available, very few are employed, and none is marketed for its use in adolescents. The most frequently used androgen therapy is based on the intramuscular administration of testosterone enanthate or cypionate every 3 to 4 weeks, with initially low doses. These are progressively increased during several months or years, in order to mimic the physiology of puberty, until adult doses are attained. Scarce experience exists with oral or transdermal formulations. Preparations containing DHT, which are not widely available, are preferred in specific conditions. Oxandrolone, a non-aromatizable drug with higher anabolic than androgenic effects, has been used in adolescents with preserved testosterone production, like Klinefelter syndrome, with positive effects on cardiometabolic health and visual, motor, and psychosocial functions. The usual protocols applied for androgen therapy in boys and adolescents are discussed.
Journal Article
Molecular Characterization of XX Maleness
2019
Androgens and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), secreted by the foetal testis, are responsible for the development of male reproductive organs and the regression of female anlagen. Virilization of the reproductive tract in association with the absence of Müllerian derivatives in the XX foetus implies the existence of testicular tissue, which can occur in the presence or absence of SRY. Recent advancement in the knowledge of the opposing gene cascades driving to the differentiation of the gonadal ridge into testes or ovaries during early foetal development has provided insight into the molecular explanation of XX maleness.
Journal Article
Anti-Müllerian Hormone and Sertoli Cell Function in Paediatric Male Hypogonadism
by
Rey, Rodolfo A.
,
Grinspon, Romina P.
in
Adolescent
,
Androgens - physiology
,
Anti-Mullerian Hormone - physiology
2010
In the prepubertal male, Sertoli cells are the most active testicular cell population. Without stimulation tests, prepubertal hypogonadism can only be evidenced if Sertoli cell function is assessed. Anti-müllerian hormone (AMH) is a distinctive marker of the prepubertal Sertoli cell. Serum AMH is high from fetal life until puberty. In postnatal life, AMH testicular production is stimulated by FSH and potently inhibited by androgens. In anorchid patients, AMH is undetectable. In prepubertal males with fetal- or childhood-onset primary or central hypogonadism affecting the whole gonad, serum AMH is low. Conversely, when hypogonadism only affects Leydig cells (i.e., LH/human chorionic gonadotrophin receptor or steroidogenic enzyme defects), serum AMH is normal/high. AMH is also normal/high in patients with androgen insensitivity. In patients of pubertal age with central hypogonadism, AMH is low for Tanner stage – reflecting lack of FSH stimulus, – but high for age – reflecting lack of testosterone inhibitory effect. FSH treatment results in serum AMH rise, whereas human chorionic gonadotrophin treatment increases testosterone levels which inhibit AMH production. In conclusion, AMH determination is helpful in assessing gonadal function, without need for stimulation tests, and orientates the aetiological diagnosis of paediatric male hypogonadism. Furthermore, serum AMH is an excellent marker of FSH and androgen action in the testis.
Journal Article
Diagnosing and treating anterior pituitary hormone deficiency in pediatric patients
by
Freire, Analía
,
Chiesa, Ana
,
Ballerini, María Gabriela
in
Combined pituitary hormone deficiency
,
Endocrine disorders
,
Fetuses
2024
Hypopituitarism, or the failure to secrete hormones produced by the anterior pituitary (adenohypophysis) and/or to release hormones from the posterior pituitary (neurohypophysis), can be congenital or acquired. When more than one pituitary hormone axis is impaired, the condition is known as combined pituitary hormone deficiency (CPHD). The deficiency may be primarily due to a hypothalamic or to a pituitary disorder, or concomitantly both, and has a negative impact on target organ function. This review focuses on the pathophysiology, diagnosis and management of anterior pituitary hormone deficiency in the pediatric age. Congenital hypopituitarism is generally due to genetic disorders and requires early medical attention. Exposure to toxicants or intrauterine infections should also be considered as potential etiologies. The molecular mechanisms underlying the fetal development of the hypothalamus and the pituitary are well characterized, and variants in the genes involved therein may explain the pathophysiology of congenital hypopituitarism: mutations in the genes expressed in the earliest stages are usually associated with syndromic forms whereas variants in genes involved in later stages of pituitary development result in non-syndromic forms with more specific hormone deficiencies. Tumors or lesions of the (peri)sellar region, cranial radiation therapy, traumatic brain injury and, more rarely, other inflammatory or infectious lesions represent the etiologies of acquired hypopituitarism. Hormone replacement is the general strategy, with critical periods of postnatal life requiring specific attention.
Journal Article
Male Central Precocious Puberty: Serum Profile of Anti-Mullerian Hormone and Inhibin B before, during, and after Treatment with GnRH Analogue
by
Bedecarrás, Patricia
,
Rey, Rodolfo A.
,
Andreone, Luz
in
Analysis
,
Anti-Müllerian hormone
,
Care and treatment
2013
We aimed to describe the functional changes of Sertoli cells, based on the measurement of serum anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) and inhibin B during treatment with GnRHa and after its withdrawal in boys with central precocious puberty. Six boys aged 0.8 to 5.5 yr were included. AMH was low at diagnosis in patients >1 yr but within the normal range in younger patients. AMH increased to normal prepubertal levels during treatment. After GnRHa withdrawal, AMH declined concomitantly with the rise in serum testosterone. At diagnosis, inhibin B was elevated and decreased throughout therapy, remaining in the upper normal prepubertal range. In patients with testicular volume above 4 mL AMH remained higher in spite of suppressed FSH. After treatment withdrawal, inhibin B rose towards normal pubertal levels. In conclusion, AMH did not decrease in patients <1 yr reflecting the lack of androgen receptor expression in Sertoli cells in early infancy. Serum inhibin B might result from the contribution of two sources: the mass of Sertoli cells and the stimulation exerted by FSH. Sertoli cell markers might provide additional tools for the diagnosis and treatment followup of boys with central precocious puberty.
Journal Article
Clinical but Not Histological Outcomes in Males With 45,X/46,XY Mosaicism Vary Depending on Reason for Diagnosis
2019
Abstract
Context
Larger studies on outcomes in males with 45,X/46,XY mosaicism are rare.
Objective
To compare health outcomes in males with 45,X/46,XY diagnosed as a result of either genital abnormalities at birth or nongenital reasons later in life.
Design
A retrospective, multicenter study.
Setting
Sixteen tertiary centers.
Patients or Other Participants
Sixty-three males older than 13 years with 45,X/46,XY mosaicism.
Main Outcome Measures
Health outcomes, such as genital phenotype, gonadal function, growth, comorbidities, fertility, and gonadal histology, including risk of neoplasia.
Results
Thirty-five patients were in the genital group and 28 in the nongenital. Eighty percent of all patients experienced spontaneous pubertal onset, significantly more in the nongenital group (P = 0.023). Patients were significantly shorter in the genital group with median adult heights of 156.7 cm and 164.5 cm, respectively (P = 0.016). Twenty-seven percent of patients received recombinant human GH. Forty-four patients had gonadal histology evaluated. Germ cells were detected in 42%. Neoplasia in situ was found in five patients. Twenty-five percent had focal spermatogenesis, and another 25.0% had arrested spermatogenesis. Fourteen out of 17 (82%) with semen analyses were azoospermic; three had motile sperm.
Conclusion
Patients diagnosed as a result of genital abnormalities have poorer health outcomes than those diagnosed as a result of nongenital reasons. Most patients, however, have relatively good endocrine gonadal function, but most are also short statured. Patients have a risk of gonadal neoplasia, and most are azoospermic, but almost one-half of patients has germ cells present histologically and up to one-quarter has focal spermatogenesis, providing hope for fertility treatment options.
Clinical health outcomes in males with 45,X/46,XY mosaicism vary depending on reason for diagnosis. However, pre-neoplasia and ongoing spermatogenesis are both relatively common in all patients.
Journal Article
Prevalence of Deleterious Variants in MC3R in Patients With Constitutional Delay of Growth and Puberty
2023
Abstract
Context
The melanocortin 3 receptor (MC3R) has recently emerged as a critical regulator of pubertal timing, linear growth, and the acquisition of lean mass in humans and mice. In population-based studies, heterozygous carriers of deleterious variants in MC3R report a later onset of puberty than noncarriers. However, the frequency of such variants in patients who present with clinical disorders of pubertal development is currently unknown.
Objective
This work aimed to determine whether deleterious MC3R variants are more frequently found in patients clinically presenting with constitutional delay of growth and puberty (CDGP) or normosmic idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (nIHH).
Methods
We examined the sequence of MC3R in 362 adolescents with a clinical diagnosis of CDGP and 657 patients with nIHH, experimentally characterized the signaling properties of all nonsynonymous variants found and compared their frequency to that in 5774 controls from a population-based cohort. Additionally, we established the relative frequency of predicted deleterious variants in individuals with self-reported delayed vs normally timed menarche/voice-breaking in the UK Biobank cohort.
Results
MC3R loss-of-function variants were infrequent but overrepresented in patients with CDGP (8/362 [2.2%]; OR = 4.17; P = .001). There was no strong evidence of overrepresentation in patients with nIHH (4/657 [0.6%]; OR = 1.15; P = .779). In 246 328 women from the UK Biobank, predicted deleterious variants were more frequently found in those self-reporting delayed (aged ≥16 years) vs normal age at menarche (OR = 1.66; P = 3.90E-07).
Conclusion
We have found evidence that functionally damaging variants in MC3R are overrepresented in individuals with CDGP but are not a common cause of this phenotype.
Journal Article
46,XY DSD with Partial Gonadal Dysgenesis and Growth Failure in a Patient with 3q27.1 Microdeletion: Candidate Gene Curation After Exhaustive Literature Review
by
Correa Brito, Lourdes
,
Casali, Bárbara
,
Izquierdo, Agustín
in
Case Report
,
Child
,
Child, Preschool
2026
Complex genetic syndromes represent a diagnostic challenge due to their diverse phenotypic presentations, which often evolve over time and may not be fully evident at birth. Disorders of sex development (DSD) comprise congenital conditions with discordance between chromosomal, gonadal, and/or genital sex. In 46,XY gonadal dysgenesis, undervirilisation or female-appearing genitalia may occur despite a normal karyotype, and diagnosis increasingly relies on genomic approaches. Prenatal and postnatal growth failure has been described in patients with syndromic 46,XY DSD. We report a male patient with SGA, lack of postnatal catch-up growth, and syndromic dysgenetic 46,XY DSD followed longitudinally from infancy to 11 years, in whom whole-exome sequencing (WES) reanalysis revealed a pathogenic 2.7 Mb microdeletion at 3q27.1q27.2. Systematic review of previously reported 3q27.1 deletions identified overlapping phenotypes but limited documentation of gonadal dysfunction. Curation of 71 genes within the deleted region highlighted DVL3 and CLCN2 as potential contributors to the gonadal phenotype, although functional evidence remains lacking. This case expands the phenotypic spectrum of 3q27.1 microdeletion syndrome, suggesting that 46,XY gonadal dysgenesis may represent an under-recognised feature. It also underscores the importance of copy number variant (CNV) analysis and periodic re-evaluation of sequencing data to increase diagnostic yield.
Journal Article
Anti-Müllerian hormone as a marker of steroid and gonadotropin action in the testis of children and adolescents with disorders of the gonadal axis
by
Grinspon, Romina P.
,
Rey, Rodolfo A.
,
Edelsztein, Nadia Y.
in
Endocrinology
,
Internal Medicine
,
Maternal and Child Health
2016
In pediatric patients, basal testosterone and gonadotropin levels may be uninformative in the assessment of testicular function. Measurement of serum anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) has become increasingly widespread since it provides information about the activity of the male gonad without the need for dynamic tests, and also reflects the action of FSH and androgens within the testis. AMH is secreted in high amounts by Sertoli cells from fetal life until the onset of puberty. Basal AMH expression is not dependent on gonadotropins or sex steroids; however, FSH further increases and testosterone inhibits AMH production. During puberty, testosterone induces Sertoli cell maturation, and prevails over FSH on AMH regulation. Therefore, AMH production decreases. Serum AMH is undetectable in patients with congenital or acquired anorchidism, or with complete gonadal dysgenesis. Low circulating levels of AMH may reflect primary testicular dysfunction, e.g. in certain patients with cryptorchidism, monorchidism, partial gonadal dysgenesis, or central hypogonadism. AMH is low in boys with precocious puberty, but it increases to prepubertal levels after successful treatment. Conversely, serum AMH remains at high, prepubertal levels in boys with constitutional delay of puberty. Serum AMH measurements are useful, together with testosterone determination, in the diagnosis of patients with ambiguous genitalia: both are low in patients with gonadal dysgenesis, including ovotesticular disorders of sex development, testosterone is low but AMH is in the normal male range or higher in patients with disorders of androgen synthesis, and both hormones are normal or high in patients with androgen insensitivity. Finally, elevation of serum AMH above normal male prepubertal levels may be indicative of rare cases of sex-cord stromal tumors or Sertoli cell-limited disturbance in the McCune Albright syndrome.
Journal Article