Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?

There has been a global increase in pediatric endocrinology referrals for the concerns of early puberty. The objective of this study was to determine the reasons behind this increase. A retrospective cross-sectional study was designed to analyze the clinical characteristics of patients seen for the...

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Main Authors: Ayse Pinar Cemeroglu MD, Damlanur Kaval MD, Ozan Ozcan MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-04-01
Series:Global Pediatric Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X211009096
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spelling doaj-b733d8584ae042fcbdbccfafe414be8d2021-04-09T00:34:11ZengSAGE PublishingGlobal Pediatric Health2333-794X2021-04-01810.1177/2333794X211009096Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?Ayse Pinar Cemeroglu MD0Damlanur Kaval MD1Ozan Ozcan MD2Baskent University School of Medicine, Pediatric Endocrinology, Ankara, TurkeyBaskent University School of Medicine, Pediatric Endocrinology, Ankara, TurkeyBaskent University School of Medicine, Pediatric Endocrinology, Ankara, TurkeyThere has been a global increase in pediatric endocrinology referrals for the concerns of early puberty. The objective of this study was to determine the reasons behind this increase. A retrospective cross-sectional study was designed to analyze the clinical characteristics of patients seen for the concerns of early puberty in pediatric endocrinology clinic of a tertiary care center (Study A). Additionally, a prospective questionnaire study was designed to assess the knowledge and concerns of the mothers regarding the timing of puberty in girls (Study B). In study A, of the 305 girls, 42.9% were overweight/obese, 68.5% either had normal pubertal development for age or were prepubertal, 1 had non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and 2 had central precocious puberty. Of the 36 boys, 56% were overweight/obese, 64% either had normal pubertal development for age or were prepubertal, and 1 had non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia. In study B, 95% of the participants thought the girls have been developing earlier, over 10% considered the first sign of puberty to be normal after the age 14 years and 12.4% considered menarche to be normal after age 14 years. The common sources of anxiety for the participants regarding the earlier timing of puberty were psychosocial issues and short final height. In conclusion, many parents had wrong beliefs/information about the normal timing of puberty and were concerned about precocious puberty in girls. Education of parents about the normal timing of puberty may help avoiding unnecessary referrals, parental anxiety, and financial burden to the society.https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X211009096
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ayse Pinar Cemeroglu MD
Damlanur Kaval MD
Ozan Ozcan MD
spellingShingle Ayse Pinar Cemeroglu MD
Damlanur Kaval MD
Ozan Ozcan MD
Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?
Global Pediatric Health
author_facet Ayse Pinar Cemeroglu MD
Damlanur Kaval MD
Ozan Ozcan MD
author_sort Ayse Pinar Cemeroglu MD
title Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?
title_short Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?
title_full Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?
title_fullStr Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?
title_full_unstemmed Etiology of Increased Referrals for Evaluation of Early Puberty in a Tertiary Care Center in Turkey: True Precocious Puberty, Obesity, or Parental Anxiety and Lack of Knowledge?
title_sort etiology of increased referrals for evaluation of early puberty in a tertiary care center in turkey: true precocious puberty, obesity, or parental anxiety and lack of knowledge?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Global Pediatric Health
issn 2333-794X
publishDate 2021-04-01
description There has been a global increase in pediatric endocrinology referrals for the concerns of early puberty. The objective of this study was to determine the reasons behind this increase. A retrospective cross-sectional study was designed to analyze the clinical characteristics of patients seen for the concerns of early puberty in pediatric endocrinology clinic of a tertiary care center (Study A). Additionally, a prospective questionnaire study was designed to assess the knowledge and concerns of the mothers regarding the timing of puberty in girls (Study B). In study A, of the 305 girls, 42.9% were overweight/obese, 68.5% either had normal pubertal development for age or were prepubertal, 1 had non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and 2 had central precocious puberty. Of the 36 boys, 56% were overweight/obese, 64% either had normal pubertal development for age or were prepubertal, and 1 had non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia. In study B, 95% of the participants thought the girls have been developing earlier, over 10% considered the first sign of puberty to be normal after the age 14 years and 12.4% considered menarche to be normal after age 14 years. The common sources of anxiety for the participants regarding the earlier timing of puberty were psychosocial issues and short final height. In conclusion, many parents had wrong beliefs/information about the normal timing of puberty and were concerned about precocious puberty in girls. Education of parents about the normal timing of puberty may help avoiding unnecessary referrals, parental anxiety, and financial burden to the society.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X211009096
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