Obesity in children with narcolepsy: metabolic and endocrine comorbidities

Author:

Arvis Laura1ORCID,Doye Emilie1,Perge Kevin1,Zhang Min2ORCID,Thieux Marine2ORCID,Guyon Aurore3,Franco Patricia23ORCID,Villanueva Carine1

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric endocrinology Unit, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 , Lyon , France

2. Integrative Physiology of the Brain Arousal Systems, CRNL, INSERM U1028, CNRS UMR5292, University of Lyon 1 , Lyon , France

3. Pediatric Sleep Unit, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon and National Reference Center for Narcolepsy, University of Lyon1 , Lyon , France

Abstract

AbstractStudy ObjectivesNarcolepsy with cataplexy is associated with obesity in children. We proposed to assess whether metabolic complications were linked to narcolepsy regardless of obesity. The second aim of the study was to compare endocrine comorbidities in obese children with narcolepsy and control patients.MethodsWe performed a case-control study in Pediatric Sleep Unit and Pediatric Endocrinology Unit of Woman Mother Child Hospital (Lyon, France) comparing 22 children with narcolepsy with 22 sex-, pubertal stage-, and BMI-matched non-syndromic obese patients. Clinical examination, biological measurements including an oral glucose tolerance test, and abdominal ultrasound were performed.ResultsNo difference regarding glucidic, lipid profile, hepatic, respiratory, and cardiovascular parameters were found between narcoleptic and control participants. Insulin sensitivity did not differ between the two groups. Control patients had more first-degree family history of overweight or obesity than children with narcolepsy (83% vs. 50%, p = .05). Prevalence of precocious puberty in children with narcolepsy was not higher than in control participants, but all the cases of advanced puberty involved children with narcolepsy who were diagnosed before 11 years old. All cases of central hypothyroidism belong to the narcoleptic group, who presented lower thyroid-stimulating hormone and fTA values compared to control children (respectively p = .03 and p = .001).ConclusionsNo difference regarding metabolic complications was found between children with narcolepsy and control participants. Thus, metabolic disorders may be related to weight gain rather than a narcolepsy-specific risk. The presence of hypothyroidism and advanced puberty suggests a global involvement of hypothalamic structures in children with narcolepsy.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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