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Clinical Trial
. 2011 Aug;165(2):249-54.
doi: 10.1530/EJE-11-0252. Epub 2011 May 20.

Leptin administration to overweight and obese subjects for 6 months increases free leptin concentrations but does not alter circulating hormones of the thyroid and IGF axes during weight loss induced by a mild hypocaloric diet

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Leptin administration to overweight and obese subjects for 6 months increases free leptin concentrations but does not alter circulating hormones of the thyroid and IGF axes during weight loss induced by a mild hypocaloric diet

Greeshma K Shetty et al. Eur J Endocrinol. 2011 Aug.

Abstract

Objective: Short-term energy deprivation reduces leptin concentrations and alters the levels of circulating hormones of the hypothalamic-pituitary-peripheral axis in lean subjects. Whether the reduction in leptin concentration during long-term weight loss in obese individuals is linked to the same neuroendocrine changes seen in lean, leptin-sensitive subjects remains to be fully clarified.

Methods: In this study, 24 overweight and obese adults (16 women and eight men; body mass index (BMI): 27.5-38.0 kg/m(2)) were prescribed a hypocaloric diet (-500 kcal/day) and were randomized to receive recombinant methionyl leptin (n=18, metreleptin, 10 mg/day self-injected s.c.) or placebo (n=6, same volume and time as metreleptin) for 6 months.

Results: Metreleptin administration did not affect weight loss beyond that induced by hypocaloric diet alone (P for interaction=0.341) but increased the serum concentrations of total leptin by six- to eight-fold (P<0.001) and led to the generation of anti-leptin antibodies. Despite free leptin concentration (P for interaction=0.041) increasing from 9±1 ng/ml at baseline to 43±15 and 36±12 ng/ml at 3 and 6 months, respectively, changes in circulating hormones of the thyroid and IGF axes at 3 and 6 months were not significantly different in the placebo- and metreleptin-treated groups.

Conclusions: Leptin does not likely mediate changes in neuroendocrine function in response to weight loss induced by a mild hypocaloric diet in overweight and obese subjects.

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Conflict of interest statement

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

A.M.D.P. was an Amgen employee at the time of the study. The authors have nothing to disclose.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Body weight (A) and serum concentrations of total leptin (B), free leptin (C) and soluble leptin receptor (D) before and after 3 and 6 months of treatment with metreleptin or placebo. Values are mean ± SEM. The P-values for the time-by-group interaction from repeated measures ANOVA are shown; symbols represent LSD post-hoc tests: *significantly different from value at baseline, P <0.05; significantly different from value at 3 months, P <0.05.

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