Mitchell R, Schaefer F, Morris ID, Schärer K, Sun JG, Robertson WR. Elevated serum immunoreactive inhibin levels in peripubertal boys with chronic renal failure. Cooperative Study Group on Pubertal Development in Chronic Renal Failure (CSPCRF).
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1993;
39:27-33. [PMID:
8348705 DOI:
10.1111/j.1365-2265.1993.tb01747.x]
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Boys with chronic renal failure have delayed progress through puberty and have raised gonadotrophin and low testosterone levels indicative of disturbed hypothalamo-pituitary-testicular function. Most studies into the mechanisms underlying the dysfunction have concentrated on the LH-Leydig cell interaction. However, it is now possible to probe the FSH-Sertoli cell axis by measuring plasma immunoreactive inhibin, which is a marker of Sertoli cell function. This study investigated the FSH-Sertoli cell (immunoreactive inhibin) axis in boys with chronic renal failure on conservative and dialysis treatment as they progressed through puberty. The effect of renal transplantation in chronic renal failure was also investigated.
DESIGN
Blood was drawn at 15-minute intervals between 2000 and 0700 h from 51 boys with chronic renal failure at various stages of puberty. The samples were divided into two pools, corresponding to the hormone secretion in the first and second part of the night. Single blood samples were drawn from a group of normal boys between 0800 and 1000 h.
PATIENTS
A total of 37 normal boys and 51 boys with chronic renal failure were examined immediately before and during puberty. Of a total of 80 pulse profiles taken in chronic renal failure, 36 were from transplanted and 44 from non-transplanted uraemic subjects.
MEASUREMENTS
Immunoreactive inhibin, FSH and testosterone were measured using standard radioimmunoassays. The subjects were pooled into pubertal stages I, II/III and IV/V for analysis of hormone data.
RESULTS
Early morning levels of immunoreactive inhibin like molecules (i-Inh) rose steadily with pubertal progression for all subject groups, those for boys with chronic renal failure being significantly elevated over normal boys from pubertal stage II/III onwards. Uraemic boys had higher levels than those who had been transplanted at all pubertal stages (P < 0.05). Early morning levels of FSH were significantly higher in uraemic patients with pubertal stages IV/V compared to our normal boys. There were no differences in i-Inh levels in plasma pooled from the samples taken between 2000 and 0115 h and 0130 and 0700 h for either treatment group at any stage of puberty. Testosterone levels rose in the second part of the profile from pubertal stages II/III onwards for both treatment groups. The proportional increase of testosterone was lower by mid puberty in uraemic than in transplanted children (percentage increases of 92 +/- 29 and 569 +/- 190 respectively, mean +/- SEM). i-Inh failed to correlate with FSH at any Tanner stage or for any subject group.
CONCLUSION
Peripubertal boys with chronic renal failure have highly elevated serum immunoreactive inhibin and FSH levels which are partially reduced by renal transplantation. There was no evidence of any relationship between i-Inh and FSH secretion in either normal boys or in uraemic or transplanted boys with the exception of a positive correlation in late pubertal patients after transplantation. Finally, despite problems associated with the current immunoassay for inhibin, this assay may still prove to be a useful marker of Sertoli cell function in testicular pathology.
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