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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 77, No. 2, 392-398, February 2003
© 2003 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


Original Research Communication

Leptin and energy metabolism in pulmonary tuberculosis1,2,3

Achim Schwenk, Lisa Hodgson, Charlotte FJ Rayner, George E Griffin and Derek C Macallan

1 From the Departments of Infectious Diseases (AS, GEG, and DCM) and Chest Medicine (CFJR), St George’s Hospital Medical School, and the Department of Clinical Dietetics, St George’s Healthcare NHS Trust (LH), London.

Background: Pulmonary tuberculosis is the classic cause of "consumption," but the pathogenesis of such wasting is largely unknown. Animal studies in other conditions suggest that leptin may be a mediator between proinflammatory cytokine activity and wasting.

Objective: We tested whether the leptin concentration, after control for body fat mass, is higher during active pulmonary tuberculosis than after recovery and whether it correlates with energy metabolism and proinflammatory cytokine activity.

Design: Nondiabetic adults with pulmonary tuberculosis (n = 32) were recruited into a prospective observational study. Patients found to be antibody positive for human immunodeficiency virus were excluded from the study. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, indirect calorimetry, and food intake protocols were performed at baseline and after 1 and 6 mo of tuberculosis treatment. Fasting plasma leptin, tumor necrosis factor {alpha} and its soluble receptor, and interleukin 6 were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

Results: Resting energy expenditure was close to Harris-Benedict predictions and did not change significantly during treatment, but energy intake increased. Leptin concentration was correlated in a log-linear fashion with percentage body fat but was independent of cytokines and energy intake. There was no significant difference in leptin, corrected for energy balance and fat mass, at baseline and after 1 and 6 mo of treatment.

Conclusions: These data are compatible with recovery from anorexia or starvation without discernible hyper- or hypometabolism. The close correlation of leptin with body fat mass is similar to observations in healthy subjects. No additional influence of disease state or proinflammatory cytokine activity was found. Leptin does not appear to be a component of the immune response to human pulmonary tuberculosis, and thus it cannot account for the weight loss and anorexia associated with tuberculosis.

Key Words: Basal metabolism • body composition • cytokines • densitometry • X-ray • energy intake • interleukin 6 • leptin • receptors • tumor necrosis factor • tuberculosis • wasting syndrome




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