2009
DOI: 10.1159/000236085
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Early Puberty in Internationally Adopted Girls: Hormonal and Clinical Markers of Puberty in 276 Girls Examined Biannually over Two Years

Abstract: Background and Aims: Retrospectivestudies have indicated that internationally adopted girls are at high risk of developing precocious puberty. Hypothetically, this could be due to selection bias. The aim of this study was to determine age at reaching pubertal milestones in healthy internationally adopted girls in a prospective, clinical study. Methods: A longitudinal cohort study including 276 randomly recruited internationally adopted girls. At baseline, age ranged from 4 to 13 years. Participants were follow… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…However, in most cases, no underlying aetiology of PP can be found. A particularly high frequency of PP was found among foreign adopted girls (Proos et al, 1991;Krstevska-Konstantinova et al, 2001;Teilmann et al, 2009) and to a lesser extent, also among immigrant children (Teilmann et al, 2002). Both adopted and immigrated children experience profound changes in lifestyle.…”
Section: Precocious Pubertymentioning
confidence: 93%
“…However, in most cases, no underlying aetiology of PP can be found. A particularly high frequency of PP was found among foreign adopted girls (Proos et al, 1991;Krstevska-Konstantinova et al, 2001;Teilmann et al, 2009) and to a lesser extent, also among immigrant children (Teilmann et al, 2002). Both adopted and immigrated children experience profound changes in lifestyle.…”
Section: Precocious Pubertymentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The biology of this phenomenon needs to be better understood. In a more recent study, adopted girls in Denmark entered puberty earlier (by about 1.3 years) than the Danish born girls, and they did not achieve the same height but weighed the same as their local counterparts [29]. …”
Section: Adolescent Growth and Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Internationally adopted children appear to reach puberty at a relatively young age 1 and to have a high risk of early puberty including very early or precocious puberty (PP), that is, pubertal development at ,8 years of age for girls and at ,9 years of age for boys. 2,3 However, there can be uncertainty over the chronological age of adopted children, raising the possibility that the seemingly elevated risk of early puberty is due to some children having a significantly underrecorded age, perhaps of up to 2 years or more.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Nonetheless, most researchers have tended to discount underrecorded age as a systemic explanation of the elevated risk of early puberty in favor of theories that assume that, in most cases at least, they are dealing with a genuine diagnosis. However, I would argue that some of the puzzling findings uncovered by the research, on age at adoption, catch-up rates, final height, and height after treatment to delay puberty, can be explained by underrecorded age.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%