ESPE Abstracts (2016) 86 FC6.3

ESPE2016 Free Communications Syndromes: Mechanisms and Management (6 abstracts)

Oxytocin Improves Social and Food-Related Behavior in Young Children with Prader-Willi Syndrome: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Crossover Trial

Renske Kuppens a, , Stephany Donze a, & Anita Hokken-Koelega a,


aDutch Growth Research Foundation, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; bErasmus MC - Sophia Children’s Hospital, Rotterdam, The Netherlands


Background: Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is known for hyperphagia with impaired satiety and a specific behavioral phenotype with stubbornness, manipulative and controlling behavior and obsessive-compulsive features. PWS is associated with hypothalamic and oxytocinergic dysfunction. In humans without PWS, intranasal oxytocin administration had positive effects on social behavior and weight balance.

Objective and hypotheses: To evaluate the effects of intranasal oxytocin compared to placebo administration on social behavior and hyperphagia in children with PWS.

Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over study in a PWS Reference center.

Method: Cross-over intervention with intranasal oxytocin and placebo administration, both during 4 weeks, in 25 children with PWS (aged 6 to 14 years).

Results: In the total group, no significant effects of oxytocin on social behavior or hyperphagia were found, but in the 17 children younger than 11 years, parents reported significantly less anger (P=0.001), sadness (P=0.005), conflicts (P=0.010) and food-related behavior (P=0.011), and improvement of social behavior (P=0.018) during oxytocin treatment compared with placebo. In the 8 children older than 11 years, the items happiness (P=0.039), anger (P=0.042) and sadness (P=0.042) were negatively influenced by oxytocin treatment compared to placebo. There were no side effects or adverse events.

Conclusion: This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study shows that intranasal oxytocin administration has beneficial effects on social behavior and food-related behavior in children with PWS younger than 11 years of age, but not in those older than 11 years of age.

Volume 86

55th Annual ESPE (ESPE 2016)

Paris, France
10 Sep 2016 - 12 Sep 2016

European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology 

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