somatropin

Somatropin

Generic Name

Somatropin

Mechanism

  • GH receptor activation: Binds the type‑I GH receptor (GHR) on target cells, inducing dimerization and phosphorylation of JAK2 kinase.
  • STAT signaling: Activated JAK2 phosphorylates STAT5, which dimerizes and translocates to the nucleus to drive transcription of target genes.
  • IGF‑1 synthesis: Induces hepatic and peripheral production of insulin‑like growth factor‑1 (IGF‑1), mediating many of GH’s anabolic effects.
  • Metabolic modulation: Promotes lipolysis, insulin sensitivity, and amino‑acid uptake, while suppressing glucagon release.

Pharmacokinetics

  • Absorption: Subcutaneous injection yields peak serum concentrations (~2–3 ng/mL) within 1–2 hours; bioavailability ≈ 70 % with once‑daily dosing.
  • Distribution: Primarily extracellular fluid; volume of distribution ≈ 1 L; minimal protein binding (~10 %).
  • Metabolism & Elimination: Cleared mainly by the kidneys (~12 % excretion unchanged) and by proteolytic degradation in plasma; elimination half‑life 1–2 hours (post‑dose), but pharmacodynamic effects persist longer due to IGF‑1 feedback.
  • Factors affecting PK: Age, sex, renal function, and body composition influence clearance; no dose adjustment needed for mild‑moderate renal impairment.

Indications

  • Children
  • Growth hormone deficiency (GHD)
  • Idiopathic short stature (ISS)
  • Turner syndrome with short stature
  • Prader‑Willi syndrome (short‑stature phenotype)
  • Chronic kidney disease‑associated short stature
  • Adults
  • Adult GHD (diagnosed by two provocative tests)
  • Turner syndrome (adult height deficit)
  • Laron syndrome (IGF‑1 signaling defect)
  • HIV‑associated lipodystrophy (to improve body composition)
  • Other
  • Short‑lived growth hormone‑deficient patients awaiting transplant
  • Pediatric patients with chronic illnesses causing catch‑up growth deficiency

Contraindications

  • Contraindicated in:
  • Laron syndrome (defective GH receptor)
  • Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus
  • Active malignancy or history of cancer with GH‑dependent growth
  • Hypersensitivity to somatropin, recombinant proteins, or excipients
  • Warnings
  • Monitor for glucose intolerance; adjust antidiabetic meds as needed.
  • Potential fluid‑retention → monitor for edema or congestive heart failure.
  • Risk of intracranial hypertension (especially in adolescent females); assess symptoms.
  • Excess IGF‑1 may increase cancer risk; consider baseline and periodic age‑adjusted IGF‑1 levels.

Dosing

PopulationTypical doseFrequencyNotes
Children0.025 mg/kg/day (max ~0.05 mg/kg)SC once dailyAdjust for height velocity; taper at puberty onset.
Adults0.1 mg/kg/week (split 0.02–0.05 mg/kg/day)SC once daily or 4–5 days/weekBegin at 0.1–0.15 mg/kg/week based on IGF‑1 response.
Pregnancy / LactationNot recommendedLimited data; risk of unknown fetal effects.

Preparation: Reconstitute lyophilized vial with sterile diluent to required concentration.
Route: Subcutaneous injection, rotating sites (abdomen, thigh, upper arm).
Storage: Refrigerated 2–8 °C; do not freeze; use within 28 days after reconstitution.

Adverse Effects

  • Common (≤10 % incidence)
  • Injection‑site reactions (pain, pruritus, erythema)
  • Headache
  • Peripheral edema
  • Abdominal pain
  • Tendinopathy
  • Serious (≤1 % incidence)
  • Glucose intolerance / type‑2 diabetes
  • Severe edema → pulmonary hypertension or heart failure
  • Intracranial hypertension (especially in adolescent girls)
  • Acute renal failure (rare)
  • Tumor growth in pre‑existing malignancy

Monitoring

ParameterFrequencyTarget / Action
IGF‑1 levelEvery 3–6 months (pre‑treatment baseline, 1‑month, then every 3–6 months)Age‑adjusted norm; adjust dose if >2 SD above or <1 SD below.
Height velocityEvery 3 months (children)≥0.5 cm/wkIncrease dose if 95 th percentileAdjust dose or monitor for edema
Fasting glucose / HbA1cEvery 3 months<5.6 % (or ≤6.5 % if diabetic)Adjust antidiabetic therapy
Blood pressureEvery visit<120/80 mmHgEvaluate fluid‑retention
Liver enzymesEvery 6–12 months≤2× ULNConsider dose adjustment if elevated
Ophthalmologic examAt baseline and annually (adolescents)Fundoscopic changesRefer to ophthalmology if signs of papilledema

Clinical Pearls

  • IGF‑1 as Dose Guide: Use age‑adjusted IGF‑1 percentiles rather than raw values; a rapid rise (>2 SD) often signals dose overshoot.
  • Adolescent Females & Headache: A sudden onset of pulsatile headache in a teenage female on somatropin warrants urgent neuro‑imaging to rule out intracranial hypertension.
  • Subclinical Diabetes: Even pre‑diabetic hyperglycemia may exacerbate with GH; screen and consider early adjustment of diabetes regimen.
  • Body Fat Redistribution: In HIV patients, somatropin improves lean mass and decreases visceral adiposity; monitor waist‑hip ratio for surrogate efficacy.
  • Combination with anabolic steroids: GH can potentiate anabolic steroid side‑effects (e.g., hypertension); avoid concurrent use without close monitoring.
  • Dose Tapering at Puberty: A gradual taper over 6–12 months reduces rebound growth hormone insensitivity and protects pubertal bone maturation.

Key Takeaway: Somatropin is a highly effective, physiologic GH replacement that, when titrated with IGF‑1 and height metrics, offers significant growth and metabolic benefits while minimizing serious adverse outcomes.

Medical & AI Content Disclaimers
Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

AI Content Disclaimer: Some definitions may be AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Always verify with authoritative medical references.

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