[HTML][HTML] Leptin is a negative acute phase protein in chronic hemodialysis patients

BR Don, LM Rosales, NW Levine, W Mitch… - Kidney international, 2001 - Elsevier
BR Don, LM Rosales, NW Levine, W Mitch, GA Kaysen
Kidney international, 2001Elsevier
Leptin is a negative acute phase protein in chronic hemodialysis patients. Background
Hypoalbuminemia strongly predicts death in hemodialysis patients and results from both
inflammation and malnutrition. One potential link between malnutrition and inflammation is
appetite suppression triggered by inflammation. Leptin is secreted by adipose tissue and
suppresses appetite, and it is also a positive acute phase protein in the rat. Factored for
body weight, leptin is known to be increased in hemodialysis patients, but its relationship to …
Leptin is a negative acute phase protein in chronic hemodialysis patients.
Background
Hypoalbuminemia strongly predicts death in hemodialysis patients and results from both inflammation and malnutrition. One potential link between malnutrition and inflammation is appetite suppression triggered by inflammation. Leptin is secreted by adipose tissue and suppresses appetite, and it is also a positive acute phase protein in the rat. Factored for body weight, leptin is known to be increased in hemodialysis patients, but its relationship to inflammation is unknown.
Methods
We examined the relationship between spontaneously occurring activation of the acute phase response and leptin levels in 29 chronic hemodialysis patients. Serum samples were obtained three times weekly for six weeks and then monthly from 29 chronic hemodialysis patients, and the levels of the positive acute phase proteins [C-reactive protein (CRP), α1-acid glycoprotein (α1 AG), serum amyloid A, ceruloplasmin] and the negative acute phase proteins (albumin and transferrin) as well as leptin and interleukin-6 (IL-6) were measured.
Results
Positive and negative acute phase proteins were evaluated at the maximum CRP (mean, 9.42 ± 1.14 mg/dL) and minimum values (mean, 0.41 ± 0.09 mg/dL). When CRP was elevated, leptin levels were significantly reduced, as were the negative acute phase proteins albumin and transferrin. Serum amyloid A, ceruloplasmin, α1 acid glycoprotein, and IL-6 were all significantly increased at the maximum CRP level, compatible with general activation of the acute phase response. The change in leptin correlated negatively with the change in CRP (R = 0.437, P = 0.018), as did changes in albumin (R = 0.620, P < 0.001).
Conclusions
Leptin is not increased as a consequence of inflammation in hemodialysis patients, but behaves as a negative rather than as a positive acute phase protein. Inflammation is unlikely to reduce appetite in dialysis patients through a leptin-mediated mechanism.
Elsevier