46 research outputs found

    European lipodystrophy registry: Background and structure

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    Background: Lipodystrophy syndromes comprise a group of extremely rare and heterogeneous diseases characterized by a selective loss of adipose tissue in the absence of nutritional deprivation or catabolic state. Because of the rarity of each lipodystrophy subform, research in this area is difficult and international co-operation mandatory. Therefore, in 2016, the European Consortium of Lipodystrophies (ECLip) decided to create a registry for patients with lipodystrophy. Results: The registry was build using the information technology Open Source Registry System for Rare Diseases in the EU (OSSE), an open-source software and toolbox. Lipodystrophy specific data forms were developed based on current knowledge of typical signs and symptoms of lipodystrophy. The platform complies with the new General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 by ensuring patient pseudonymization, informational separation of powers, secure data storage and security of communication, user authentication, person specific access to data, and recording of access granted to any data. Inclusion criteria are all patients with any form of lipodystrophy (with the exception of HIV-associated lipodystrophy). So far 246 patients from nine centres (Amsterdam, Bologna, Izmir, Leipzig, M\ufcnster, Moscow, Pisa, Santiago de Compostela, Ulm) have been recruited. With the help from the six centres on the brink of recruitment (Cambridge, Lille, Nicosia, Paris, Porto, Rome) this number is expected to double within the next one or 2 years. Conclusions: A European registry for all patients with lipodystrophy will provide a platform for improved research in the area of lipodystrophy. All physicians from Europe and neighbouring countries caring for patients with lipodystrophy are invited to participate in the ECLip Registry. Study registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03553420). Registered 14 March 2018, retrospectively registered

    IMPROVE 2022 International Meeting on Pathway‐Related Obesity: Vision of Excellence

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    Nearly 90 clinicians and researchers from around the world attended the first IMPROVE 2022 International Meeting on Pathway-Related Obesity. Delegates attended in person or online from across Europe, Argentina and Israel to hear the latest scientific and clinical developments in hyperphagia and severe, early-onset obesity, and set out a vision of excellence for the future for improving the diagnosis, treatment, and care of patients with melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) pathway-related obesity. The meeting co-chair Peter Kühnen, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany, indicated that change was needed with the rapidly increasing prevalence of obesity and the associated complications to improve the understanding of the underlying mechanisms and acknowledge that monogenic forms of obesity can play an important role, providing insights that can be applied to a wider group of patients with obesity. World-leading experts presented the latest research and led discussions on the underlying science of obesity, diagnosis (including clinical and genetic approaches such as the role of defective MC4R signalling), and emerging clinical data and research with targeted pharmacological approaches. The aim of the meeting was to agree on the questions that needed to be addressed in future research and to ensure that optimised diagnostic work-up was used with new genetic testing tools becoming available. This should aid the planning of new evidence-based treatment strategies for the future, as explained by co-chair Martin Wabitsch, Ulm University Medical Center, Germany

    New insight into inter-organ crosstalk contributing to the pathogenesis of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)

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    Rapid improvement of hepatic steatosis after initiation of leptin substitution in a leptin-deficient girl.

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    Background: Leptin deficiency is associated with severe obesity and metabolic disturbances. Increased liver fat content has been reported in only one case beforehand, even though hepatic steatosis is a typical comorbidity of common obesity. It is also frequent in patients with lipodystrophy where it resolves under leptin therapy. Subject and Methods: In 2010, we reported a leptin-deficient patient with a novel homozygous mutation in the leptin gene and severe hepatic steatosis. We have now studied serum changes and changes in liver fat content during the substitution with recombinant methionyl human leptin. Results: After 23 weeks of leptin substitution, elevated transaminases, total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein levels normalized. After 62 weeks, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance improved from 10.7 to 6.0 and body fat mass dropped from 50.2 to 37.8%. Liver fat content was drastically reduced from 49.7 to 9.4%. The first changes in liver fat content were detectable after 3 days of therapy. Conclusion: Our patient showed a remarkable reduction of liver fat content during the treatment with recombinant methionyl human leptin. These changes occurred rapidly after initiation of the substitution, which implies that leptin has a direct effect on hepatic lipid metabolism in humans as it is seen in rodents

    La gestione del paziente con lipodistrofia

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    Locomotion And Burrowing In Limbless Vertebrates

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/62754/1/242414a0.pd
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