The Formidable yet Unresolved Interplay between Endometriosis and Obesity

Author:

Pantelis Athanasios1ORCID,Machairiotis Nikolaos2ORCID,Lapatsanis Dimitris P.1

Affiliation:

1. Surgeon, 4th Department of Surgery, Evaggelismos General Hospital of Athens, Ipsilantou 45, Athens 106 76, Greece

2. Fellow in Endometriosis and Minimal Access Surgery, Northwick Park, Central Middlesex and Ealing Hospitals, London North West University Heathcare, NHS Trust, London, UK

Abstract

Obesity and endometriosis are two very common entities, yet there is uncertainty on their exact relationship. Observational studies have repeatedly shown an inverse correlation between endometriosis and a low body mass index (BMI). However, obesity does not protect against endometriosis and on the contrary an increased BMI may lead to more severe forms of the disease. Besides, BMI is not accurate in all cases of obesity. Consequently, other anthropometric and phenomic traits have been studied, including body adiposity content, as well as the effect of BMI early in life on the manifestation of endometriosis in adulthood. Some studies have shown that the phenotypic inverse correlation between the two entities has a genetic background; however, others have indicated that certain polymorphisms are linked with endometriosis in females with increased BMI. The advent of metabolic bariatric surgery and pertinent research have led to the emergence of biomolecules that may be pivotal in understanding the pathophysiological interaction of the two entities, especially in the context of angiogenesis and inflammation. Future research should focus on three objectives: detection and interpretation of obesity-related biomarkers in experimental models with endometriosis; integration of endometriosis-related queries into bariatric registries; and multidisciplinary approach and collaboration among specialists.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Environmental Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference72 articles.

1. Endometriosis: an overview of cochrane reviews;J. Brown;Cochrane Database System Review,2014

2. Endometriosis;K. T. Zondervan;New England Journal of Medicine,2020

3. Endometriosis

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