ISSN 1662-4009 (online)

ey0015.9-2 | Late consequences of tumour therapy: prevention and monitoring | ESPEYB15

9.2 Anthropometry in Long-Term Survivors of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in Childhood and Adolescence

L Collins , L Beaumont , A Cranston , S Savoie , T Nayiager , R Barr

To read the full abstract: J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2017;6:294-298The difficulties in defining obesity in childhood cancer survivors have been emphasised. In these patients, body mass index (BMI) has been confirmed to be a poor predictor of body fatness, because of their impaired linear growth, body composition changes (decreased lean mass and fat redistribution) and abdominal adiposity. Th...

ey0015.9-13 | Biologic agents in chronic inflammatory diseases: lights and shadows | ESPEYB15

9.13 Biologic agents are associated with excessive weight gain in children with inflammatory bowel disease

L Haas , R Chevalier , BT Major , F Enders , S Kumar , J Tung

To read the full abstract: Dig Dis Sci. 2017;62:3110-3116This retrospective single-centre study is the first to report the impact of anti-tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy on weight gain in children with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The results are consistent with data in adults, in whom weight gain during anti-TNF treatment was negatively correlated to pre-treatment BMI (1). A si...

ey0015.11-2 | New insight into obesity comorbidities | ESPEYB15

11.2 Impact of severe obesity on cardiovascular risk factors in youth

G Zabarsky , C Beek , E Hagman , B Pierpoint , S Caprio , R Weiss

To read the full abstract: Journal of Pediatrics 2018;192:105-114Rising degree of obesity has been shown to predict increased metabolic risk in obese children and adolescents (1). Nonetheless, it is unclear if BMI categories can be successfully applied to populations of obese children and adolescents for a risk-adapted stratification of therapeutic approaches, and here especially for the in...

ey0015.11-9 | The brain decides weight gain | ESPEYB15

11.9 Neural correlates of familial obesity risk and overweight in adolescence

S Carnell , L Benson , KY Chang , Z Wang , Y Huo , A Geliebter , BS Peterson

To read the full abstract: NeuroImage 2017; 159: 236-247The results of this study suggest that, compared to adolescents with a low risk, lean adolescents with a high familial obesity risk show a weaker activation of neural systems subserving attentional self-regulation in response to food-denoting words. These same changes were found in overweight or obese adolescents. It is interestin...

ey0015.11-18 | Prebiotics reduce fat mass | ESPEYB15

11.18 Prebiotics Reduce Body Fat and Alter Intestinal Microbiota in Children Who Are Overweight or With Obesity

AC Nicolucci , MP Hume , I Martínez , S Mayengbam , J Walter , RA Reimer

To read the full abstract: Gastroenterology. 2017 Sep;153(3):711-722In adults, prebiotic intake is associated with improvements in satiety, postprandial glucose and insulin concentrations (1). The effect of prebiotic intervention in overweight/obese children has been rarely studied. This clinical trial showed that supplementation with oligofructose-enriched inulin for 16 weeks decreased BM...

ey0015.13-7 | How does paediatric endocrinology and diabetes fit in the global initiatives? | ESPEYB15

13.7 Delivering modern, high-quality, affordable pathology and laboratory medicine to low-income and middle-income countries: a call to action

S Horton , R Sullivan , J Flanigan , KA Fleming , MA Kuti , LM Looi , SA Pai , M Lawler

To read the full abstract: Lancet 2018; 391(10133):1953-1964[Comment on 13.5, 13.6 & 13.7] Published just a week before the World Health Organization put out their first Essential Diagnostics List (http://www.who.int/medical_devices/diagnostics/WHO_EDL_2018.pdf), this series of 3 papers highlights the previo...

ey0015.13-9 | Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes in Resource-Limited Settings | ESPEYB15

13.9 Type 2 diabetes in adolescents and young adults

N Lascar , J Brown , H Pattison , AH Barnett , CL Bailey , S Bellary

To read the full abstract: Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol 2018; 6:69-80The prevalence of T2DM in youth is increasing dramatically worldwide, but the bulk of the increase is expected to take place in Africa, South East Asia and South America. Although genetic factors may seem to be the obvious reason for such geographical differences, a careful analysis of the existing literature suggests that...

ey0015.13-12 | Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes in Resource-Limited Settings | ESPEYB15

13.12 Clinical profile of diabetes at diagnosis among children and adolescents at an endocrine clinic in Ghana

E Ameyaw , SB Asafo-Agyei , S Thavapalan , AC Middlehurst , GD Ogle

To read the full abstract: World J Diabetes 2017; 8(9):429-435This is the first paper to describe the clinical presentation and social determinants in youth with diabetes residing and cared for at a single tertiary care center in Ghana that is supported by the International Diabetes Federation’s Life for a Child (LFAC) program. As demonstrated by the ability to conduct and publish this stud...

ey0015.13-18 | Advances in the Diagnosis and Management of Congenital Hypothyroidism | ESPEYB15

13.18 Worldwide Recall Rate in Newborn Screening Programs for Congenital Hypothyroidism

L Mehran , D Khalili , S Yarahmadi , A Amouzegar , M Mojarrad , N Ajang , F Azizi

To read the full abstract: Int J Endocrinol Metab 2017; 15(3):e55451Systematic neonatal screening for congenital hypothyroidism (CH) was first proposed by Dr Jean Dussault, a Canadian (adult) endocrinologist, in 1974. It was rapidly implemented in most high-income countries in the late 1970’s and 1980’s. Ideally, a screening program should be highly sensitive (able to ...

ey0015.13-19 | Advances in the Diagnosis and Management of Congenital Hypothyroidism | ESPEYB15

13.19 Newborn Screening Guidelines for Congenital Hypothyroidism in India: Recommendations of the Indian Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Endocrinology (ISPAE) - Part I: Screening and Confirmation of Diagnosis

MP Desai , R Sharma , I Riaz , S Sudhanshu , R Parikh , V Bhatia

To read the full abstract: Indian J Pediatr 2018; 85(6):440-447In 2017, the population of India was estimated at 1.28 billion. With a birth rate of 19/1000, it means that 24.4 million babies are born each year in India. More than half of the births take place at home, in particular in rural India. Assuming an incidence of 1:2500 for congenital hypothyroidism (CH), close to 10,000 babies are b...