Metreleptin Robustly Increases Resting-state Brain Connectivity in Treatment-naïve Female Patients With Lipodystrophy

Author:

Schlögl Haiko12ORCID,Villringer Arno34ORCID,Miehle Konstanze1,Fasshauer Mathias5,Stumvoll Michael12ORCID,Mueller Karsten36ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Endocrinology, Nephrology, Rheumatology, Division of Endocrinology, University Hospital Leipzig , 04103 Leipzig , Germany

2. Helmholtz Institute for Metabolic, Obesity and Vascular Research (HI-MAG) of the Helmholtz Zentrum München at the University of Leipzig and University Hospital Leipzig , 04103 Leipzig , Germany

3. Max-Planck-Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences , 04103 Leipzig , Germany

4. Day Clinic of Cognitive Neurology, University of Leipzig , 04103 Leipzig , Germany

5. Institute of Nutritional Sciences, Justus-Liebig-University , 35392 Giessen , Germany

6. Department of Neurology, Charles University, First Faculty of Medicine and General University Hospital , 120 00 Prague , Czech Republic

Abstract

Abstract Context Research in lipodystrophy (LD) and its treatment with metreleptin has not only helped patients with LD but has opened new directions in investigating leptin's role in metabolism and the regulation of eating behavior. Previously, in a study with patients with LD undergoing metreleptin treatment using functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), we found significantly increased resting-state brain connectivity in 3 brain areas including the hypothalamus. Objective In this study, we aimed to reproduce our functional MRI findings in an independent sample and compare results to healthy participants. Design Measurements in 4 female patients with LD undergoing metreleptin treatment and 3 healthy untreated controls were performed at 4 different time points over 12 weeks. To identify treatment-related brain connectivity alterations, eigenvector centrality was computed from resting-state functional MRI data for each patient and each session. Thereafter, analysis aimed at detecting consistent brain connectivity changes over time across all patients. Results In parallel to metreleptin treatment of the patients with LD, we found a significant brain connectivity increase in the hypothalamus and bilaterally in posterior cingulate gyrus. Using a 3-factorial model, a significant interaction between group and time was found in the hypothalamus. Conclusions Investigating brain connectivity alterations with metreleptin treatment using an independent sample of patients with LD, we have reproduced an increase of brain connectivity in hedonic and homeostatic central nervous networks observed previously with metreleptin treatment. These results are an important contribution to ascertain brain leptin action and help build a foundation for further research of central nervous effects of this important metabolic hormone.

Funder

Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Deutsches Zentrum für Diabetesforschung

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

Reference41 articles.

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