Acquired hypothalamic obesity: A clinical overview and update

Author:

Roth Christian L.12ORCID,McCormack Shana E.34

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Integrative Brain Research Seattle Children's Research Institute Seattle Washington, DC USA

2. Department of Paediatrics University of Washington, School of Medicine Seattle Washington, DC USA

3. Neuroendocrine Centre, Division of Endocrinology and Diabetes Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

4. Department of Paediatrics Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractHypothalamic obesity (HO) is a rare and complex disorder that confers substantial morbidity and excess mortality. HO is a unique subtype of obesity characterized by impairment in the key brain pathways that regulate energy intake and expenditure, autonomic nervous system function, and peripheral hormonal signalling. HO often occurs in the context of hypothalamic syndrome, a constellation of symptoms that follow from disruption of hypothalamic functions, for example, temperature regulation, sleep–wake circadian control, and energy balance. Genetic forms of HO, including the monogenic obesity syndromes, often impact central leptin–melanocortin pathways. Acquired forms of HO occur as a result of tumours impacting the hypothalamus, such as craniopharyngioma, surgery or radiation to treat those tumours, or other forms of hypothalamic damage, such as brain injury impacting the region. Risk for severe obesity following hypothalamic injury is increased with larger extent of hypothalamic damage or lesions that contain the medial and posterior hypothalamic nuclei that support melanocortin signalling pathways. Structural damage in these hypothalamic nuclei often leads to hyperphagia, central insulin and leptin resistance, decreased sympathetic activity, low energy expenditure, and increased energy storage in adipose tissue, the collective effect of which is rapid weight gain. Individuals with hyperphagia are perpetually hungry. They do not experience fullness at the end of a meal, nor do they feel satiated after meals, leading them to consume larger and more frequent meals. To date, most efforts to treat HO have been disappointing and met with limited, if any, long‐term success. However, new treatments based on the distinct pathophysiology of disturbed energy homeostasis in acquired HO may hold promise for the future.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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