Low levels of IGF1, a growth promoting hormone at or before birth, could lead to growth defects in cysyic fibrosis patients, claim researchers at the University of Iowa. The study could help predict the severity of the disease in patients and may lead to new therapies for growth defects in people with CF.
Growth defects are common in people with CF and have been blamed, in part, on low levels of the growth-promoting hormone called insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1).
Traditionally, the malnutrition and lung inflammation that accompany CF have been blamed for the decreased levels of IGF1. However, even patients who are relatively healthy often do not reach their full growth potential, and newborns with CF often are smaller at birth than healthy babies.
To investigate the relationship between neonatal IGF1 levels and growth patterns in CF, the research team studied newborn pigs with a CF-causing gene mutation. This animal model, which was generated by the UI researchers and colleagues at the University of Missouri in 2008, has many of the same symptoms and complications that are seen in humans with CF.
"By examining IGF1 at this time point, we eliminated consequences of lung inflammation, which is absent at birth, and malnutrition, because nutrition in utero is provided by the mother," explained Leah Reznikov, UI postdoctoral fellow in internal medicine and co-first author of the study.
"We found that IGF1 levels were significantly reduced at birth in CF newborn pigs."
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"Collectively, these findings suggest that IGF1 deficits begin very early in the course of CF disease and reductions in IGF1 may, in part, explain growth defects observed at birth in infants with CF," Reznikov said.
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The study has been published online in the Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Source-ANI