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Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences

BACKGROUND: Numerous studies associate adipokines with colorectal malignancy, but few data deal with patients suffering exclusively of rectal carcinoma (RC). AIMS: We evaluated leptin and adiponectin levels in RC patients compared to healthy population and their dynamics after surgery. MATERIAL AND...

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Autores principales: Florescu, Alexandru, Branisteanu, Dumitru, Bilha, Stefana, Scripcariu, Dragos, Florescu, Ioana, Scripcariu, Viorel, Dimofte, Gabriel, Grigoras, Ioana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31425509
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212471
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author Florescu, Alexandru
Branisteanu, Dumitru
Bilha, Stefana
Scripcariu, Dragos
Florescu, Ioana
Scripcariu, Viorel
Dimofte, Gabriel
Grigoras, Ioana
author_facet Florescu, Alexandru
Branisteanu, Dumitru
Bilha, Stefana
Scripcariu, Dragos
Florescu, Ioana
Scripcariu, Viorel
Dimofte, Gabriel
Grigoras, Ioana
author_sort Florescu, Alexandru
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Numerous studies associate adipokines with colorectal malignancy, but few data deal with patients suffering exclusively of rectal carcinoma (RC). AIMS: We evaluated leptin and adiponectin levels in RC patients compared to healthy population and their dynamics after surgery. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Serum leptin and adiponectin were evaluated before surgery in 59 RC consecutive patients (38 males and 21 females), and in age and weight matched healthy controls. Measurements were repeated at 24, 72 hours and 7 days after surgery. RESULTS: Adipokine levels were higher in women. Controls had higher leptin (32.±4.34 vs 9.51±1.73 ng/ml in women and 11±2.66 vs 2.54±0.39 ng/ml in men, p = 0.00048 and 0.0032) and lower adiponectin (9±0.64 vs 11.85±1.02 μg/ml in women and 7.39±0.51 vs 8.5±0.62 μg/ml in men, p = 0.017 and 0.019) than RC patients. Surgery caused an increase of leptin from 5.11±0.8 to 18.7±2.42 ng/ml, p = 6.85 x 10¨(8), and a decrease of adiponectin from 9.71±0.58 to 7.87±0.47 μg/ml, p = 1.4 x 10¨(10) for all RC patients and returned thereafter to the initial range at 7 days. Adipokines were correlated with body weight (BW). The significance of correlation persisted after surgery only in males, but disappeared in females. Adipokines were not modified by tumor position, presurgical chemoradiotherapy or surgical technique. Women with RC experiencing weight loss had higher adiponectin than women without weight modifications (p<0.05 at all time points). CONCLUSIONS: Adipokine levels of patients with RC differ from the healthy population, possibly reflecting an adaptation to disease. Adipokine modifications after surgery may be related to acute surgical stress. Whether leptin and adiponectin directly interact is not clear. Women have higher adipokine levels, more so after significant weight loss, but the strength of their correlation with BW decreases after surgery. These data suggest gender differences in the adipokine profile of RC patients which may find clinical applications.
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spelling pubmed-66997972019-09-04 Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences Florescu, Alexandru Branisteanu, Dumitru Bilha, Stefana Scripcariu, Dragos Florescu, Ioana Scripcariu, Viorel Dimofte, Gabriel Grigoras, Ioana PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Numerous studies associate adipokines with colorectal malignancy, but few data deal with patients suffering exclusively of rectal carcinoma (RC). AIMS: We evaluated leptin and adiponectin levels in RC patients compared to healthy population and their dynamics after surgery. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Serum leptin and adiponectin were evaluated before surgery in 59 RC consecutive patients (38 males and 21 females), and in age and weight matched healthy controls. Measurements were repeated at 24, 72 hours and 7 days after surgery. RESULTS: Adipokine levels were higher in women. Controls had higher leptin (32.±4.34 vs 9.51±1.73 ng/ml in women and 11±2.66 vs 2.54±0.39 ng/ml in men, p = 0.00048 and 0.0032) and lower adiponectin (9±0.64 vs 11.85±1.02 μg/ml in women and 7.39±0.51 vs 8.5±0.62 μg/ml in men, p = 0.017 and 0.019) than RC patients. Surgery caused an increase of leptin from 5.11±0.8 to 18.7±2.42 ng/ml, p = 6.85 x 10¨(8), and a decrease of adiponectin from 9.71±0.58 to 7.87±0.47 μg/ml, p = 1.4 x 10¨(10) for all RC patients and returned thereafter to the initial range at 7 days. Adipokines were correlated with body weight (BW). The significance of correlation persisted after surgery only in males, but disappeared in females. Adipokines were not modified by tumor position, presurgical chemoradiotherapy or surgical technique. Women with RC experiencing weight loss had higher adiponectin than women without weight modifications (p<0.05 at all time points). CONCLUSIONS: Adipokine levels of patients with RC differ from the healthy population, possibly reflecting an adaptation to disease. Adipokine modifications after surgery may be related to acute surgical stress. Whether leptin and adiponectin directly interact is not clear. Women have higher adipokine levels, more so after significant weight loss, but the strength of their correlation with BW decreases after surgery. These data suggest gender differences in the adipokine profile of RC patients which may find clinical applications. Public Library of Science 2019-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6699797/ /pubmed/31425509 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212471 Text en © 2019 Florescu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Florescu, Alexandru
Branisteanu, Dumitru
Bilha, Stefana
Scripcariu, Dragos
Florescu, Ioana
Scripcariu, Viorel
Dimofte, Gabriel
Grigoras, Ioana
Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences
title Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences
title_full Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences
title_fullStr Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences
title_full_unstemmed Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences
title_short Leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - Gender differences
title_sort leptin and adiponectin dynamics at patients with rectal neoplasm - gender differences
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31425509
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212471
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