View clinical trials related to Dwarfism.
Filter by:Short stature is a frequent reason for referral to a pediatric endocrinology clinic. Short stature is especially prevalent among those with failure to thrive (whose weight is significantly below the average weight of his/her peers). The growth hormone has limited efficacy for medical treatment of short stature when the cause of short stature is not growth hormone deficiency. This study will investigate the effect of 6 months of nutritional supplement (essential amino acids) compared to placebo in the linear growth of short children who have not yet reached puberty.
Short stature can be caused by a number of genetic etiologies, many of which directly affect the growth plate. The FGFR3/CNP pathway is central to growth of the chondrocyte. The study team hypothesizes that patients with selected genetic causes of short stature that interact with this pathway will benefit from treatment with vosoritide, a CNP analog, a selective NPR-B agonist which directly targets the growth plate. This study will enroll patients with short stature in selected genetic categories and will follow them for a 6 month observation period to obtain a baseline growth velocity, safety profile and quality of life assessment. Patients will then be treated with vosoritide for 12 months and will be assessed for safety monitoring and improvement in height outcomes.
The purpose of the study is to measure the functional effects of recombinant GH in skeletal muscle, in addition to growth promotion, in short prepubertal boys with either growth hormone deficiency or idiopathic short stature. Patients will be similarly short. The investigators will also compare these values in the short stature cohort to those obtained in testing performed in normally growing age-matched healthy control boys not on GH. The group on GH will be studied before and after 6 and 12 months of GH treatment.
The study compares 2 medicines used for the treatment of children who are born small and who stayed small: somapacitan given once a week (a new medicine) and Norditropin® given once a day (the medicine doctors can already prescribe). Participants will either get somapacitan or Norditropin® - which treatment is decided by chance. Both participants and the study doctor will know which treatment the participants get. The study will last for 5 years. Participants will take either an injection once every week or once every day.
After the first stage (52 weeks) of Phase II clinical trial, Pegylated recombinant human growth hormone (PEG-rhGH) injection of appropriate dose in compliance with ISS clinical treatment strategy is used to treat children with ISS (Idiopathic Short Stature). The long-term efficacy and safety of the investigational product are evaluated, which can provide more scientific and reliable medication guidance information for clinical diagnosis and treatment.
Estrogens are responsible for the disappearance of growth cartilage in the long bones at the end of the pubertal growth spurt both in boys and in girls. It is therefore hypothesized that stopping pubertal development and hence estrogen production, will prolong and increase the pubertal growth spurt, especially when growth hormone is given concommitantly. Boys in early puberty, with a bone age between 11 and 13 years and a predicted adult height below 163 cm or girls in early puberty with a bone age between 10 and 12 years and a predicted height under 151 cm will be treated with triptorelin 3.75 mg and Zomacton growth hormone for 4 years.