hrp0086p2-p266 | Diabetes P2 | ESPE2016

Gene-Environment (GxE) Interactions in Childhood Type 1 Diabetes (T1D): A Case-only Geographical Approach in the ISIS-Diab Cohort

Bougneres Pierre , Fur Sophie Le , Valtat Sophie , Lathrop Mark , Valleron Alain-Jacques , ISIS-Diab Network France

Background: T1D concordance in MZ twins being ~40%, non-heritable factors play a major causal role in this autoimmune disease. T1D has recently increased in young European children. Collecting prospective environmental data in a cohort of millions children-years starting soon after birth seems unpracticable. Retrospective case–control studies are an alternative, provided biased controls and recall bias can both be avoided.Objectives: To develop a &#...

hrp0086p2-p588 | Perinatal Endocrinology P2 | ESPE2016

Case Report on Hyperinsulinism/hyperammonaemia Syndrome: An Easily Treatable Cause of Postprandial Hypoglycaemia

Seneviratne Sumudu , Jayatunge Tharanga , Atapattu Navoda , De Silva K. S. H. , Wickramasinghe V. P. , De Silva Harendra

Background: Hyperinsulinism/hyperammonaemia (HI/HA) syndrome is associated with postprandial hypoglycaemia and mild hyperammonemia. There is increased insulin release following protein ingestion, which is amenable to diaxozide therapy. While developmental delay and normoglycaemic seizures can also occur, hepatomegaly has not been reported. We report a child with HI/HA and hepatomegaly, mild learning difficulty and obesity, who was initially mistaken to have glycogen storage di...

hrp0086p2-p773 | Pituitary and Neuroendocrinology P2 | ESPE2016

Primary Thirst Defect is a Rare But Important Complication Following Surgery for Hypothalamic Hamartoma and Intractable Epilepsy

Giri Dinesh , Blair Jo , Das Urmi , Dharmaraj Poonam , Senniappan Senthil , Malluci Connor , Benedetta Pettorini , Pizer Barry , Burns Sasha , Didi Mohammed

Background: Diabetes insipidus (DI) is a well-recognized post neuro surgical complication arising after hypothalamic-pituitary surgery. DI occurring in the post-operative period can be transient happening within 24–48 hour of surgery, secondary to trauma to the connections between the magnocellular bodies and the nerve terminals in the posterior pituitary, or to axonal shock from disturbances in the vascular supply to the pituitary stalk and posterior pituitary.<p cla...

hrp0086p2-p850 | Syndromes: Mechanisms and Management P2 | ESPE2016

An Unusual Cause of Short Stature in a Phenotypic Male with Type I Diabetes Mellitus due to an Unexpected Deletion of the Y Chromosome

Giri Dinesh , Ghatak Atrayee , Landes Caren , Ramakrishnan Renuka

Background: Short stature homeobox (SHOX) gene, located on the pseudoautosomal region of the sex chromosome plays an important role in the development of skeleton and its mutations/deletions can cause skeletal dysplasias.Objective and hypotheses: We report a male, with Type I Diabetes (T1DM) with Y chromosome deletion and short stature due to the concurrent loss of SHOX.Method: A 15-year-old boy with T1DM for 6 years was referred f...

hrp0086p1-p929 | Thyroid P1 | ESPE2016

Neonatal Thyrotoxicosis and Craniosynostosis Associated with Maternal Graves’ Disease and High Dose maternal Thyroxine Therapy for Papillary Carcinoma

Seneviratne Sumudu , Lucus Nishani , Weerasinghe Ashangi

Background: Neonatal Graves’ disease (NGD) occurs in 1–2% pregnancies with maternal Graves’ disease. Thyroid auto-antibodies can persist in the maternal circulation even 10 years after thyroidectomy and can lead to NGD in the absence of maternal thyrotoxicosis. Both maternal stimulating autoantibodies and maternal thyroxine can cross the placenta, and have been implicated in neonatal craniosynostosis.Objective and hypotheses: We report a c...

hrp0082s4.1 | Recent Advances in Our Understanding of Hypothyroidism | ESPE2014

Management of Central Hypothyroidism

van Trotsenburg P

Central hypothyroidism (CeH) can be defined as a lower than desirable secretion of thyroid hormone by a normal thyroid gland resulting from (quantitative or qualitative) insufficient TSH secretion. Causes are congenital and acquired functional or anatomic defects of the hypothalamus, pituitary gland or both. CeH can be difficult to diagnose, especially in children without a history of brain defects or brain damaging treatment (e.g. irradiation), and when plasma FT4 concentrati...

hrp0082s9.2 | Novel Insights into Pituitary Development and Function | ESPE2014

Sox2+ve cells in the adult murine pituitary are stem cells with tumour-inducing potential

Martinez-Barbera Juan Pedro , Andoniadou Cynthia

Background: Several lines of evidence suggest that the adult pituitary contains a population of tissue-specific stem cells capable of differentiating into hormone-producing cells. Previously, we have shown that Sox2+ve cells are able to self-renew and differentiate in vitro, suggesting that this population of undifferentiated cells may contain stem cells in vivo. When targeted with oncogenic mutations adult stem cells can become cancer stem cells, able to self-renew and give r...

hrp0082wg1.3 | Bone &amp; Growth Plate | ESPE2014

New Therapies in Metabolic Bone Disease: Denusomab

Collins M

Osteoclasts are bone-resorbing cells important in normal growth plate development and bone remodeling. The development of osteoclasts is potently driven by mononuclear RANK and osteogenic cell RANKL interaction. Denosumab is a monoclonal antibody drug that targets RANKL and inhibits osteoclastogenesis. It is a potent and effective treatment for pathologic processes that involve bone resorption, such as osteoporosis and bone metastases, conditions for which it is approved. Deno...

hrp0082wg3.6 | DSD | ESPE2014

I-DSD and I-CAH Registry Update

Bryce Jillian

Background: Effective clinical care and research in disorders of sex development (DSD), as well as assessment of long-term outcome of these rare conditions, requires multicentre collaboration across national boundaries and across multiple clinical and research disciplines. This registry is currently funded by the UK MRC as the International DSD Registry (www.i-dsd.org) which adheres to the highest standards of data governance and security. Fr...

hrp0082p1-d1-182 | Perinatal and Neonatal Endocrinology | ESPE2014

Clinical and Histological Heterogeneity of Congenital Hyperinsulinism Due to Paternally Inherited Heterozygous ABCC8/KCNJ11 Mutations

Arya Ved Bhushan , Guemes Maria , Nessa Azizun , Alam Syeda , Shah Pratik , Gilbert Clare , Senniappan Senthil , Flanagan Sarah E , Ellard Sian , Hussain Khalid

Context: Congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI) has two main histological types – diffuse and focal. Diffuse CHI is due to recessive or dominant mutations in ABCC8/KCNJ11. Focal disease is due to somatic maternal allele loss of 11p15 in pancreatic β-cells along with paternally inherited germline ABCC8/KCNJ11 mutation. Fluorine-18 L-3, 4-dihydroxyphenylalanine positron emission tomography computerized tomography (18F DOPA–PET...