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Assays / Hormones
/ Leptin (serum/plasma)
Introduction
Leptin is a cytokine-like peptide secreted by adipocytes. It has
a critical endocrine function, signalling to the hypothalamus the
level of body fat reserves. Thus, in starvation, where fat reserves
are very low, leptin is also low, and lack of leptin action in the
brain stimulates hunger. This is most dramatically illustrated by
the rare situation of genetic deficiency of leptin, where appetite
becomes uncoupled from body fat stores, and so unremitting severe
hyperphagia leads to severe early onset obesity, which is abolished
by subcutaneous replacement of leptin Low leptin levels in starvation
have other central effects in addition, including suppression of
the hypothalamic-gonadal axis. Proof of this concept is the correction
of weight loss-related amenorrhoea in female athletes by leptin
therapy.
In congenital or acquired lipodystrophy, where fat tissue itself
is absent or lost, reduced storage capacity for ingested fat leads
to severe hypertriglyceridaemia, often complicated by pancreatitis,
and severe insulin resistance. This problem is often exacerbated
by low levels of leptin which produce hyperphagia and increase the
ingested load of lipid. It has been clearly demonstrated in this
situation that leptin replacement has dramatically beneficial effects
on dyslipidaemia, insulin action and glycaemic control.
Clinical Indications
1. Diagnosis of Congenital Leptin Deficiency in Severe Early
Onset Obesity
A rare cause of extreme early onset obesity is genetic deficiency
of leptin. Thus the early evaluation of children who manifest hyperphagic
obesity in the first few years of life should include serum leptin
determination.
2. Diagnosis of leptin deficiency in congenital or acquired
lipodystrophy
All generalised lipodystrophy and some cases of acquired lipodystrophy
are associated with hypoleptinaemia. Correction of this with subcutaneous
leptin therapy has dramatic metabolic benefits and so identification
of candidates for leptin therapy in this group of patients is important.
3. Diagnosis of weight-related hypothalamic amenorrhoea
Demonstration of low or absent leptin may provide supportive biochemical
evidence for extreme weight loss in the aetiology of secondary amenorrhoea.
Method Information
2 site timer resolved fluorescence immunoassay (DELFIA)
Patient Preparation
Fasting 9a.m. samples
Sample Requirements
0.5mls of serum, EDTA or Lithium heparain anticoagulated plasma
Sample Handling
Separate with 1 hour and freeze. Send frozen.
Interpretation
Appropriate Gender, Age and BMI related Reference range data will
be provided
Quality Assessment
None available
Centres offering this assay
Cambridge
References
Coll AP, Farooqi IS, O'Rahilly S. The hormonal control of food
intake. Cell. 2007 Apr 20;129(2):251-62.
Welt CK, Chan JL, Bullen J, Murphy R, Smith P, DePaoli AM, Karalis
A, Mantzoros CS. Recombinant human leptin in women with hypothalamic
amenorrhea. N Engl J Med. 2004 Sep 2;351(10):987-97.
Petersen KF, Oral EA, Dufour S, Befroy D, Ariyan C, Yu C, Cline
GW, DePaoli AM, Taylor SI, Gorden P, Shulman GI. Leptin reverses
insulin resistance and hepatic steatosis in patients with severe
lipodystrophy. J Clin Invest. 2002 May;109(10):1345-50.
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