ESPE Abstracts (2019) 92 P3-275

ESPE2019 Poster Category 3 Late Breaking Abstracts (69 abstracts)

Serum Spexin is Correlated with Lipoprotein(a) and Androgens in Normal-Weight, Overweight and Obese Adolescent Females

Flora Bacopoulou 1,2 , Despoina Apostolaki 1 , Aimilia Mantzou 2 , Artemis Doulgeraki 3 , Artur Pałasz 4 , Eleni Koniari 2 & Vasiliki Efthymiou 1


1Center for Adolescent Medicine and UNESCO Chair on Adolescent Health Care, First Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Aghia Sophia Children's Hospital, Athens, Greece. 2Unit of Clinical and Translational Research in Endocrinology, First Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece. 3Department of Bone and Mineral Metabolism, Institute of Child Health, Aghia Sophia Children's Hospital, Athens, Greece. 4Department of Histology, School of Medicine in Katowice, Katowice, Poland


Background: The Spexin gene is considered the most dysregulated in obese human fat with an almost complete absence of expression in obese human fat in comparison with non-obese fat tissues. Limited data from human and animal studies suggest that the novel peptide spexin may potentially impact food intake, weight regulation and body adiposity.

Objective: The aim of this study was to compare serum spexin concentrations between normal-weight and overweight/obese adolescent females and explore possible relationships between circulating spexin and anthropometric, hormonal, metabolic, bone and body composition parameters.

Methods: Study participants included adolescent females, aged 12-18 years, who presented to the Centre for Adolescent Medicine and UNESCO Chair on Adolescent Health Care, from May 2016 to June 2018. Exclusion criteria included severe comorbidity, chronic medication, contraceptive use and pregnancy. Adolescents underwent evaluation of their anthropometric, metabolic and hormonal parameters as well as assessment of their bone mineral density and body composition with the use of dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. Serum spexin concentrations were measured by ELISA using the Spexin (Human) EIA Kit of Phoenix Pharmaceuticals (USA) with analytical sensitivity of 0.08 ng/ml. Comparisons of continuous data were carried out with the use of student t-test or Mann-Whitney U test for non-parametric data. Pearson or Spearman's rho correlation coefficients identified correlations between continuous variables. The International Obesity Task Force cut-offs for body mass index (BMI) were used to categorize adolescents into normal-weight, overweight and obese.

Results: A total of 80 adolescent girls aged (mean±SD) 16.23±2.26 years; 55 normal-weight females (mean age±SD, 16.69±2.22 years; mean BMI±SD, 19.72±2.52 kg/m2), 25 obese and overweight females (mean age±SD, 15.17±2.01 years; mean BMI±SD, 29.35±3.89 kg/m2), participated in the study (p=0.005 and p<0.001 respectively). No significant differences (p=0.378) were observed in serum spexin concentrations between normal-weight and obese/overweight adolescents.

Circulating spexin levels were not correlated with BMI or body fat percentage. In the total sample, serum spexin concentrations were correlated with Lp(a) (rs = 0.402, p = 0.046). In the obese/overweight adolescents serum spexin concentrations were correlated with total testosterone (rs = 0.727, p = 0.011) and free androgen index (rs = 0.755, p = 0.007), whereas in the normal-weight participants spexin levels were correlated with dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHEA-S) (rs = -0.445, p = 0.038).

Conclusion: Whe proposed role of spexin in adolescent females needs to be further investigated in large study samples.

Volume 92

58th Annual ESPE

Vienna, Austria
19 Sep 2019 - 21 Sep 2019

European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology 

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