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Diabetes Care, Vol 23, Issue 3 371-376, Copyright © 2000 by American Diabetes Association
Is leptin associated with diabetic retinopathy?
G Uckaya, M Ozata, Z Bayraktar, V Erten, N Bingol and IC Ozdemir
Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Gulhane School of Medicine, Etlik/Ankara, Turkey.
OBJECTIVE: In advanced stages of diabetic retinopathy, new blood vessels
are formed based on undefined mechanisms. Recently, leptin was shown to
possess an angiogenic action in vitro and to induce neovascularization in
vivo. The aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship
between plasma leptin levels and the severity of diabetic retinopathy.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: There were 70 patients with type 2 diabetes
(age 47.9 +/- 9.7 years, BMI 26.4 +/- 3.3 kg/m2) who were seen in a retina
outpatient clinic recruited and assigned to subgroups according to the
stage of their diabetic retinopathy. There were 66 healthy volunteer
subjects matched with the diabetic patients for age, BMI, and sex who
served as control subjects (age 46.0 +/- 8.8 years, BMI 27.1 +/- 2.3
kg/m2). Fasting plasma leptin levels were measured. RESULTS: Plasma leptin
level of the diabetic patients was not significantly different from the
control subjects. In patients with proliferative diabetic retinopathy (n =
17), the mean plasma level of leptin (16.1 +/- 9.2 ng/ml) was significantly
higher than that in patients with nonproliferative retinopathy (n = 20)
(11.5 +/- 3.5 ng/ml, P = 0.039) or patients without retinopathy (n = 33)
(5.8 +/- 3.7 ng/ml, P = 0.001). The mean leptin level in patients with
nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy was also significantly higher than
that in patients without retinopathy (P = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: Our results
show that the more advanced the diabetic retinopathy, the higher the plasma
leptin levels, even after adjusting the leptin levels for BMI. The presence
of such a positive correlation need not imply a causal relationship.
Nevertheless, previously observed leptin-induced promotion of angiogenesis
and neovascularization lends support to the possibility that leptin may
play a role in the progression of human diabetic retinopathy to a
proliferative phase. This possibility deserves further investigation.

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Copyright © 2000 by the American Diabetes Association.
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