How to diagnose a lipodystrophy syndrome.
Vantyghem. Marie-Christine MC; Balavoine. Anne-Sophie AS; Douillard. Claire C; Defrance. Frédérique F; Dieudonne. Lucile L; Mouton. Fanny F; Lemaire. Christine C; Bertrand-Escouflaire. Nicole N; Bourdelle-Hego. Marie-Françoise MF; Devemy. Fabrice F; Evrard. Anne A; Gheerbrand. Dominique D; Girardot. Caroline C; Gumuche. Sophie S; Hober. Christine C; Topolinski. Hélène H; Lamblin. Blandine B; Mycinski. Bénédicte B; Ryndak. Amélie A; Karrouz. Wassila W; Duvivier. Etienne E; Merlen. Emilie E; Cortet. Christine C; Weill. Jacques J; Lacroix. Dominique D; Wémeau. Jean-Louis JL
Key Findings
- Lipodystrophy includes many genetic and acquired types, often linked to insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk.
- Recombinant leptin is effective for some genetic lipodystrophies.
- Tesamorelin improves metabolic syndrome and reduces visceral fat in HIV patients with lipodystrophy.
Practical Outcomes
- Tesamorelin may be a useful tool for people with HIV‑associated lipodystrophy to lower visceral fat and improve insulin sensitivity. No dosing details are given, so any use should be under medical supervision or after thorough research. Its potential off‑label use for visceral fat reduction in non‑HIV contexts remains speculative.
Summary
The abstract reviews many rare fat‑loss diseases and notes that while leptin can help genetic forms, the drug tesamorelin (a growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone analog) has been shown to improve the metabolic problems seen in HIV‑related lipodystrophy, such as excess belly fat and insulin resistance.
Abstract
The spectrum of adipose tissue diseases ranges from obesity to lipodystrophy, and is accompanied by insulin resistance syndrome, which promotes the occurrence of type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia and cardiovascular complications. Lipodystrophy refers to a group of rare diseases characterized by the generalized or partial absence of adipose tissue, and occurs with or without hypertrophy of adipose tissue in other sites. They are classified as being familial or acquired, and generalized or partial. The genetically determined partial forms usually occur as Dunnigan syndrome, which is a type of laminopathy that can also manifest as muscle, cardiac, neuropathic or progeroid involvement. Gene mutations encoding for PPAR-gamma, Akt2, CIDEC, perilipin and the ZMPSTE 24 enzyme are much more rare. The genetically determined generalized forms are also very rare and are linked to mutations of seipin AGPAT2, FBN1, which is accompanied by Marfan syndrome, or of BANF1, which is characterized by a progeroid syndrome without insulin resistance and with early bone complications. Glycosylation disorders are sometimes involved. Some genetically determined forms have recently been found to be due to autoinflammatory syndromes linked to a proteasome anomaly (PSMB8). They result in a lipodystrophy syndrome that occurs secondarily with fever, dermatosis and panniculitis. Then there are forms that are considered to be acquired. They may be iatrogenic (protease inhibitors in HIV patients, glucocorticosteroids, insulin, graft-versus-host disease, etc.), related to an immune system disease (sequelae of dermatopolymyositis, autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes, particularly associated with type 1 diabetes, Barraquer-Simons and Lawrence syndromes), which are promoted by anomalies of the complement system. Finally, lipomatosis is currently classified as a painful form (adiposis dolorosa or Dercum's disease) or benign symmetric multiple form, also known as Launois-Bensaude syndrome or Madelung's disease, which are sometimes related to mitochondrial DNA mutations, but are usually promoted by alcohol. In addition to the medical management of metabolic syndrome and the sometimes surgical treatment of lipodystrophy, recombinant leptin provides hope for genetically determined lipodystrophy syndromes, whereas modifications in antiretroviral treatment and tesamorelin, a GHRH analog, is effective in the metabolic syndrome of HIV patients. Other therapeutic options will undoubtedly be developed, dependent on pathophysiological advances, which today tend to classify genetically determined lipodystrophy as being related to laminopathy or to lipid droplet disorders.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-06-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ando.2012.04.010
66
83