Genetic potential and height velocity during childhood and adolescence do not fully account for shorter stature in cystic fibrosis.
Zofia N Zysman-ColmanMarissa J KilbergVictor S HarrisonAlessandra ChesiStruan F A GrantJonathan MitchellSaba SheikhDenis HadjiliadisMichael R RickelsRonald C RubensteinAndrea KellyPublished in: Pediatric research (2020)
Children with CF remain shorter than their healthy peers despite advances in care. Our study demonstrates that children with CF have persistent shorter stature from an early age and fail to reach their genetic potential despite height velocities comparable to those of average maturing healthy peers and similar enrichment in known height increasing single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genetic risk scores better explained variability in pancreatic sufficient than in pancreatic insufficient individuals, suggesting that other modifying factors are in play for pancreatic insufficient individuals with CF. Given the CF Foundation's recommendation to target not only normal body mass index, but normal height percentiles as well, this study adds valuable insight to this discussion.