Journalartikel

Serum IGF1 and linear growth in children with congenital leptin deficiency before and after leptin substitution


AutorenlisteBeghini, Marianna; Brandt, Stephanie; Koerber, Ingrid; Kohlsdorf, Katja; Vollbach, Heike; Lennerz, Belinda; Denzer, Christian; Shalitin, Shlomit; Santini, Ferruccio; Blum, Werner F.; von Schnurbein, Julia; Wabitsch, Martin

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2021

Seiten1448-1456

ZeitschriftInternational Journal of Obesity

Bandnummer45

Heftnummer7

ISSN0307-0565

eISSN1476-5497

Open Access StatusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41366-021-00809-2

VerlagSpringer Nature [academic journals on nature.com]


Abstract

Background Evidence from in vitro and rodent studies suggests that leptin, a key signal of long-term energy reserves, promotes IGF1 synthesis and linear growth. This effect of leptin has not been fully investigated in humans. The aim of our study was to investigate the effect of leptin substitution on growth factors and linear growth in children with congenital leptin deficiency (CLD).

Methods In this cohort study we included eight pediatric patients (six males), age 0.9-14.8 years, who were diagnosed with CLD and received leptin substitution at our University Medical Center. We calculated standard deviation scores (SDS) for serum levels of IGF1 and IGFBP3, IGF1/IGFBP3 molar ratio, and height at baseline (T0) and 12 months (T12) after the initiation of substitution with metreleptin.

Results All patients had severe obesity (BMI-SDS mean +/- SD: 4.14 +/- 1.51) at T0 and significant BMI-SDS reduction to 2.47 +/- 1.05 at T12. At T0, all patients were taller than the mid-parental median, yet had low IGF1 and IGF1/IGFBP3 molar ratios (IGF1-SDS (x) over bar (T0): -1.58 +/- 0.92, IGF1/IGFBP3 molar ratio-SDS (x) over bar (T0): -1.58 +/- 0.88). At T12, IGF1-SDS increased significantly (Delta(T0-12): 1.63 +/- 1.40, p = 0.01), and IGFBP3-SDS and IGF1/IGFBP3 molar ratio-SDS showed a trend toward an increase. In the three children within the childhood growth period (post-infancy, pre-puberty) height-SDS increased (Delta height-SDST0-12: 0.57 +/- 0.06, p = 0.003) despite substantial weight loss.

Conclusions These results in CLD patients are contrary to observations in children with idiopathic obesity who typically have above-mean IGF1 levels that decrease with weight loss, and therefore suggest that leptin increases IGF1 levels and promotes linear growth.




Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilBeghini, M., Brandt, S., Koerber, I., Kohlsdorf, K., Vollbach, H., Lennerz, B., et al. (2021) Serum IGF1 and linear growth in children with congenital leptin deficiency before and after leptin substitution, International Journal of Obesity, 45(7), pp. 1448-1456. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41366-021-00809-2

APA-ZitierstilBeghini, M., Brandt, S., Koerber, I., Kohlsdorf, K., Vollbach, H., Lennerz, B., Denzer, C., Shalitin, S., Santini, F., Blum, W., von Schnurbein, J., & Wabitsch, M. (2021). Serum IGF1 and linear growth in children with congenital leptin deficiency before and after leptin substitution. International Journal of Obesity. 45(7), 1448-1456. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41366-021-00809-2



Schlagwörter


BINDING-PROTEIN (IGFBP)-1BONE TURNOVEREARLY-ONSET OBESITYFACTOR-IFACTOR (IGF)-IPOTENT STIMULATORREFERENCE INTERVALSWEIGHT-LOSS

Zuletzt aktualisiert 2025-10-06 um 11:25