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1Department of Radiology, 2Neuroendocrine Unit, and 3Department of Biostatistics, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
Submitted 1 August 2008 ; accepted in final form 14 December 2008
| ABSTRACT |
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obesity; body composition; growth hormone deficiency; waist circumference; computed tomography; dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; receiver operator characteristic curve analysis
The GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)-arginine stimulation test is a sensitive and specific test for diagnosing GH deficiency, and a cutoff limit of 5 ng/ml has been used to diagnose GH deficiency in adults (6). However, this test is invasive, time consuming, and expensive. Should GH deficiency be determined to be a treatable condition in young women with visceral adiposity, it would be useful to be able to perform a simple body composition measurement to identify subjects who might be at risk for GH deficiency and for whom formal GH simulation testing might be more likely to yield a positive result. Computed tomography (CT) can quantify visceral and subcutaneous fat depots (7) and is the gold standard for measuring visceral fat. However, it is expensive and involves radiation exposure. Several clinical methods, including anthropometry and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), have been used as surrogates for estimating body fat (8, 15, 19, 20, 27, 28, 34), but these measurements do not allow for the evaluation of visceral fat content. The purpose of our study was to compare sensitivity and specificity of simple, less invasive measures of body composition, such as anthropometry, with CT and DXA to predict GH deficiency in a group of lean, overweight, and obese premenopausal women. In addition, we wanted to determine threshold values for each technique to predict GH deficiency by using receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve analysis.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Subjects. The study group comprised 45 healthy premenopausal women who were recruited from the community through advertisements. Exclusion criteria included hypothalamic or pituitary disorders, diabetes mellitus or other chronic illnesses, estrogen or glucocorticoid use, and weight >280 lb. (due to the limitations of the DXA and CT scanners). Participants were admitted to the General Clinical Research Center at the Massachusetts General Hospital, where testing was performed. Each participant underwent anthropometric measurements, DXA, and CT, as detailed below, and a GHRH-arginine stimulation test. For the GHRH-arginine stimulation test, GHRH (1 µg/kg iv) plus arginine (0.5 g/kg iv; maximum 30 g) were administered, and GH levels were drawn at baseline and every 30 min for 2 h (6). GH deficiency was based on standard criteria used to diagnose adults with hypopituitarism (peak GH after stimulation with GHRH and arginine <5 ng/ml) (6). Clinical characteristics, peak GH after GHRH-arginine stimulation, and fat mass, measured by DXA, have been previously published (29, 30).
Biochemical analyses. Serum samples were collected and stored at –80°C. Serum GH was measured using an immunoradiometric assay kit, with a minimum detection limit of 0.01 ng/ml, an intra-assay coefficient of variation of 3.1–5.4%, and an interassay coefficient of variation of 5.9–11.5%.
Anthropometry. Body weight was measured at a standard balance beam scale to the nearest 0.1 kg in triplicate and averaged. Height was measured with subjects barefoot to the nearest 0.1 cm in triplicate and averaged. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated as weight divided by height squared (kg/m2).
Skin fold thickness of the triceps, biceps, subscapular, and suprailiac areas was measured using metal calipers in triplicate and averaged. Skin fold measurements were used to estimate percent body fat.
Body circumferences were measured at the waist at the smallest circumference between the lowest rib and iliac crest, at the level of the umbilicus, the midpoint between the lowest rib and iliac crest, the iliac crest, and at the hip using a metal tape to the nearest 0.1 cm in triplicate and averaged. The largest circumference represents the largest value obtained from the above measures. Iliac waist-to-hip and largest hip-to-waist ratios were determined from the circumferential measurements of the waist at the level of the umbilicus and the hips at the level of the iliac crest taken with the patient in a standing position.
All measurements were performed by research bionutritionists who had been previously trained and certified to perform these procedures.
Dual X-ray absorptiometry. DXA measurements of body composition were performed using a Hologic QDR 4500 scanner (Waltham, MA). The following parameters were obtained: percent fat of the right and left upper and lower extremities, percent trunk fat, and total percent body fat. In addition, the amount of fat (in g) of the upper and lower extremities, trunk, and total body was obtained. Coefficients of variation of DXA have been reported as 3% for body fat mass (21).
Computed tomography. Each subject underwent cross-sectional CT scan of the abdomen at the level of L4. Assessment of visceral and subcutaneous abdominal fat compartments by single-slice CT image of the abdomen was performed. Patients were placed supine, feet first in the scanner, and with flexion of the knees to minimize lumbar lordosis. A lateral scout image was obtained to identify the level of L4, which served as the landmark for the single-slice image. Scan parameters for each image were standardized (144 table height, 80 kV, 70 mA, 2 s, 1-cm slice thickness, 48 field of view). Fat attenuation coefficients were set at –50 to –250 Hounsfield units (HU) as described by Borkan et al. (7). Total abdominal cross-sectional area was computed by outlining the outer contour of the abdomen. A second outline of the back and abdominal wall musculature (inner contour) was used to define the subcutaneous fat area. Visceral abdominal fat was defined as the area within the inner contour comprising all pixels with attenuation coefficients between –50 and –250 HU. The total fat area was calculated as the sum of subcutaneous fat and visceral abdominal fat. These values were used to calculate the area of subcutaneous adipose tissue, visceral adipose tissue, and total adipose tissue.
Statistical analysis. JMP Statistical Discoveries (version 4.0.2; SAS Institute, Cary, NC) and MedCalc (version 9.2.1.0; Mariakerke, Belgium) were used for statistical analysis. The means and SD were calculated, and groups were compared using the Student's t-test. ROC curve analysis of different methods of body composition measurements was performed to determine sensitivity and specificity, area under the ROC curve, and confidence intervals (CI), as well as cutoff values for each method to detect GH deficiency.
Since this was an exploratory study, we did not perform a validation study. However, we performed a cross-validated error estimate to determine the error estimate for each measure.
Power calculation. The t-test power was used to approximate the power of the ROC curve test. With proposed sample sizes of 9 for the GH-deficient and 36 for the GH-sufficient groups, the study will have a power of 82.3% to yield a statistically significant result (that the area under the ROC curve is greater than 0.5). This computation assumes that the mean difference is 1.1 (corresponding to means of 1.1 vs. 0.0) and the common within-group standard deviation is 1.0.
| RESULTS |
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25 and <30 kg/m2, and obese (n = 23) if BMI was
30 kg/m2, based on World Health Organization definitions (1). Nine patients had GH deficiency as determined by the GHRH-arginine stimulation test, and 36 subjects were GH sufficient. Subjects with GH deficiency were slightly older and had higher weight, BMI, and total, subcutaneous, and visceral fat, as determined by CT, compared with the GH-sufficient subjects. Clinical characteristics of the two groups are shown in Table 2.
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| DISCUSSION |
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An increased prevalence of visceral adiposity and cardiovascular events has been established in women with GH deficiency due to hypopituitarism. Studies have shown that decreased GH secretion is an independent risk factor for visceral obesity and cardiovascular disease in this patient population. Higher cardiovascular mortality in female GH-deficient patients than in males has been found (9, 24). This may reflect a relatively more severe state of GH deficiency in women compared with men, since GH secretion is nearly twice as high in young, healthy women as in men (11). Therefore, we focused our study on healthy overweight and obese women and the relationship between visceral adiposity and GH deficiency in this patient population.
Multiple studies have demonstrated decreases in visceral adiposity, without a change in overall weight or BMI in GH-deficient patients during physiological GH administration (5, 15). Although not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for clinical use, GH replacement has been studied in subjects with visceral adiposity without pituitary or hypothalamic disease and may improve insulin sensitivity over time, potentially due to adipose reduction. In a study by Johannsson et al. (17), administration of low-dose GH to obese men resulted in decreased visceral fat mass, suggesting a possible therapeutic role for GH in patients with visceral obesity. In a study evaluating GH administration in obese postmenopausal women (12), 12 mo of GH administration reduced the amount of visceral fat and increased thigh muscle mass, whereas no change in subcutaneous adipose tissue was observed. Therefore, if further research confirms these effects, it might be useful to develop diagnostic tools to identify subjects with visceral adiposity who might be at risk for being GH deficient and in whom formal GH stimulation testing should be performed.
Sophisticated imaging modalities such as CT or MRI are able to distinguish visceral from subcutaneous fat with a high level of precision, but these methods are expensive and time consuming, and CT involves radiation exposure (2, 26). Simple anthropometric variables such as waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio have been used to estimate visceral adipose tissue. Several studies have indicated that the waist circumference is strongly related to health risks associated with obesity and that it correlates with visceral fat measured by CT (13, 16). Our study has shown that the largest waist circumference is an easy and reliable method that can predict GH deficiency in premenopausal women. Waist circumferences can be measured at several locations. In our study, the waist circumference measured at the umbilicus corresponded in 75% of study participants to the largest waist circumference. Visceral adiposity measured with CT showed a higher sensitivity and specificity in detecting GH deficiency than largest waist circumference. However, the difference between the two methods was not statistically significant. Based on ROC curves, the most sensitive and specific cutoff was >102 cm in women for largest waist circumference. Current guidelines suggest a cutoff of >88 cm in women based on detection of many metabolic risk factors (16). In our study, the specificity of detecting GH deficiency dropped from 75 to 25% when 88 cm was used as a cutoff. The International Diabetes Federation suggests a cutoff value for largest waist circumference of >80 cm to diagnose metabolic syndrome. With the use of this cutoff value, the specificity in our study dropped to 9%. In a study by Wahrenberg et al. (33), a cutoff value of >100 cm was sensitive and specific for predicting insulin resistance in men and women. Based on our data, a waist circumference of >102 cm in premenopausal women provides a useful reference value to identify obese women who may be at risk for GH deficiency and who should undergo formal GH stimulation testing.
In our study, BMI and iliac waist-to-hip ratio measurements showed low sensitivity and specificity in predicting GH deficiency. Trunk and total fat as determined by DXA showed high sensitivity and specificity in detecting GH deficiency. However, sensitivity and specificity were higher for the largest waist circumference. In addition, DXA requires radiation exposure. As expected, skin fold measurements did not predict GH deficiency in our population. We performed skin fold thickness measurements of the triceps, biceps, subscapular, and suprailiac areas to present the complete spectrum of anthropometric measurements.
Our study had several limitations. First is the relatively small number of subjects who were GH deficient (n = 9) compared with those who were GH sufficient (n = 36). Second, we only studied premenopausal women. There are sex- and age-related differences in the relation of waist measurement to accumulation of visceral adipose tissue (22, 23). Thus it is likely that different cutoff values for waist circumference as predictors of GH deficiency would be found in pre- and postmenopausal women and in men. We also did not perform a validation study to test the proposed cutoff values derived in our study in a different population. However, we performed a cross-validated error estimate that confirmed our cutoff values. Without a larger sample size and without appropriate cross-validation data, our cutoff values for waist circumference should be viewed with caution until results of larger studies have become available. Since there were only nine cases in our sample, estimates of sensitivity would have a standard error of 13% (calculated at 80% sensitivity). A measured sensitivity of 100% would have a 95% lower confidence bound of 72%. For many clinical applications, this is not adequate, and further validation studies in larger patient populations should be performed.
In conclusion, the largest waist circumference predicts the presence of GH deficiency in premenopausal women without hypothalamic or pituitary disease with high sensitivity and specificity and nearly as well as CT measurement of visceral adiposity. This provides further evidence of the importance of visceral fat mass as a predictor and possible mechanism for GH deficiency in young healthy women. GH replacement has not been established to be a safe and effective treatment for young overweight or obese women and is not FDA approved. However, should GH deficiency be established to have important cardiovascular risk or metabolic consequences in the future, we raise the possibility that a simple test that can be performed in any office with a tape measure might be able to identify women in whom GH deficiency is likely and therefore in whom formal GH stimulation testing might be indicated.
| GRANTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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