<< NIH awards UNC researcher $507,000 for rotavirus vaccine study | Monkeys experience similar uncanny valley effect like humans >>
Read in | English | EspaƱol

Increase in adiponectin hormone levels protects against sepsis-related mortality

Published on October 14, 2009 at 2:54 AM · No Comments

A hormone naturally found in the fat that surrounds the abdominal organs for the first time has been linked to death related to sepsis, surgeons reported at the 2009 Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons. A study exhibited at the conference showed that low levels of the hormone adiponectin placed animals at a profoundly high risk of death from a septic insult. The study findings also revealed that sepsis could be prevented by giving the hormone to the animals. "It is a novel observation that decreasing levels of a fat hormone could be a very important mechanism that can lead to the development of sepsis-related mor-tality," said Subodh Verma, MD, PhD, FRCSC, FAHA, a cardiac surgeon at St. Michael's Hospital, associate professor of surgery and pharmacology at the University of Toronto, and Canada Research Chair of Atherosclerosis.

"The implications are two-fold," he added. "One is that adiponectin may serve as an independent predictor of developing sepsis-related inflammation and vascular dysfunction as well as increased mortality from sepsis. The other is that treatment strategies or approaches that cause an increase in adiponectin levels may protect against sepsis-related mortality," he said.

Dr. Verma and his associates are hoping to be the first group to conduct studies of adiponectin in patients. The investigators are seeking approval from the national health care system of Canada to begin a clinical trial that will administer a purified form of adiponectin to patients who are in the beginning stages of sepsis. "It will probably take at least a year to get through the process of approval and test adiponectin in a half-dozen patients to show that it can be given without any deleterious effects. I would hypothesize that there would be none. When safety can be demonstrated, we can embark on an open-label trial in a few patients and then hopefully on a randomized trial," Dr. Verma said.

The study was conducted in an animal model that mimics what occurs in patients who have low adiponectin levels. These are patients who are at high risk for developing sepsis after surgery because of underlying diabetes, morbid obesity, or metabolic syndrome [a combination of factors including abdominal obesity, high blood fat composition, high blood pressure, dia-betes, and high inflammatory and blood clot indicators]. The risk of septic-related mortality is two-and-a-half to three times higher in such patients.

This increased risk was thought to be related to insulin resistance from diabetes or mechanical issues. "A person's size might predispose patients to developing septic compli-cations, particularly when they have to be intubated or ventilated," he said.

Comments
The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News-Medical.Net.



  Country flag

biuquote
  • Comment
  • Preview
Loading