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Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors

Women who are obese at the time of breast cancer diagnosis have higher overall mortality than normal weight women and some evidence implicates adiponectin and leptin as contributing to prognostic disadvantage. While intentional weight loss is thought to improve prognosis, its impact on these adipoki...

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Autores principales: Thompson, Henry J., Sedlacek, Scot M., Wolfe, Pamela, Paul, Devchand, Lakoski, Susan G., Playdon, Mary C., McGinley, John N., Matthews, Shawna B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4516992/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26132992
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu7075156
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author Thompson, Henry J.
Sedlacek, Scot M.
Wolfe, Pamela
Paul, Devchand
Lakoski, Susan G.
Playdon, Mary C.
McGinley, John N.
Matthews, Shawna B.
author_facet Thompson, Henry J.
Sedlacek, Scot M.
Wolfe, Pamela
Paul, Devchand
Lakoski, Susan G.
Playdon, Mary C.
McGinley, John N.
Matthews, Shawna B.
author_sort Thompson, Henry J.
collection PubMed
description Women who are obese at the time of breast cancer diagnosis have higher overall mortality than normal weight women and some evidence implicates adiponectin and leptin as contributing to prognostic disadvantage. While intentional weight loss is thought to improve prognosis, its impact on these adipokines is unclear. This study compared the pattern of change in plasma leptin and adiponectin in overweight-to-obese post-menopausal breast cancer survivors during weight loss. Given the controversies about what dietary pattern is most appropriate for breast cancer control and regulation of adipokine metabolism, the effect of a low fat versus a low carbohydrate pattern was evaluated using a non-randomized, controlled study design. Anthropometric data and fasted plasma were obtained monthly during the six-month weight loss intervention. While leptin was associated with fat mass, adiponectin was not, and the lack of correlation between leptin and adiponectin concentrations throughout weight loss implies independent mechanisms of regulation. The temporal pattern of change in leptin but not adiponectin was affected by magnitude of weight loss. Dietary pattern was without effect on either adipokine. Mechanisms not directly related to dietary pattern, weight loss, or fat mass appear to play dominant roles in the regulation of circulating levels of these adipokines.
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spelling pubmed-45169922015-07-30 Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors Thompson, Henry J. Sedlacek, Scot M. Wolfe, Pamela Paul, Devchand Lakoski, Susan G. Playdon, Mary C. McGinley, John N. Matthews, Shawna B. Nutrients Article Women who are obese at the time of breast cancer diagnosis have higher overall mortality than normal weight women and some evidence implicates adiponectin and leptin as contributing to prognostic disadvantage. While intentional weight loss is thought to improve prognosis, its impact on these adipokines is unclear. This study compared the pattern of change in plasma leptin and adiponectin in overweight-to-obese post-menopausal breast cancer survivors during weight loss. Given the controversies about what dietary pattern is most appropriate for breast cancer control and regulation of adipokine metabolism, the effect of a low fat versus a low carbohydrate pattern was evaluated using a non-randomized, controlled study design. Anthropometric data and fasted plasma were obtained monthly during the six-month weight loss intervention. While leptin was associated with fat mass, adiponectin was not, and the lack of correlation between leptin and adiponectin concentrations throughout weight loss implies independent mechanisms of regulation. The temporal pattern of change in leptin but not adiponectin was affected by magnitude of weight loss. Dietary pattern was without effect on either adipokine. Mechanisms not directly related to dietary pattern, weight loss, or fat mass appear to play dominant roles in the regulation of circulating levels of these adipokines. MDPI 2015-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4516992/ /pubmed/26132992 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu7075156 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Thompson, Henry J.
Sedlacek, Scot M.
Wolfe, Pamela
Paul, Devchand
Lakoski, Susan G.
Playdon, Mary C.
McGinley, John N.
Matthews, Shawna B.
Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors
title Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors
title_full Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors
title_fullStr Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors
title_short Impact of Weight Loss on Plasma Leptin and Adiponectin in Overweight-to-Obese Post Menopausal Breast Cancer Survivors
title_sort impact of weight loss on plasma leptin and adiponectin in overweight-to-obese post menopausal breast cancer survivors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4516992/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26132992
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu7075156
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