Abstract
Background/Aims: Little information is available on the involvement of leptin in clinical conditions associated with malnutrition, such as liver cirrhosis. The behaviour of serum leptin in patients with different Child-Pugh score, post-hepatitis liver cirrhosis and insulin sensitivity has therefore been investigated and compared with that in alcoholic Child C patients. Methods: Sixty-four patients, aged 51 to 62 years, with different degrees of post-hepatitis cirrhosis or Child C alcoholic cirrhosis were compared with 15 age-matched control subjects. Body composition was estimated by skinfold thickness. Serum leptin, glucose and insulin were assayed. Results: In post-hepatitis patients a significant reduction in leptin levels was observed as the Child-Pugh score worsened (men: 2.94±1.61 in Child C vs 6.78±2.49 ng/ml in controls, p<0.001; women: 4.14±0.66 in Child C vs 16.16±3.90 ng/ml in controls, p<0.02). Conversely, only the men with alcoholic liver cirrhosis showed a significant difference in leptin concentration compared to controls (8.5±2.1 vs 16.4±7.9 kg, p<0.05). In particular, Child C, alcoholic cirrhotic women had a significantly ( p=0.03) higher level of leptin than post-hepatitis matched women. A positive correlation was observed between leptin and fat mass (men R 2=0.59, p<0.0001 and women R 2=0.65, p<0.0001). While fasting levels of serum leptin correlated significantly with insulin concentrations in controls, a similar relationship was not observed in the cirrhotic population, which displayed higher insulin concentrations than controls. Conclusions: In contrast to findings in alcoholic cirrhotic women, low leptin values in post-hepatitis cirrhotic patients mainly represent the expression of a reduced fat mass.
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