Obesity Facts (Aug 2022)

Suggestive evidence for an antidepressant effect of metreleptin treatment in patients with lipodystrophy

  • Diana Branco Vieira,
  • Jochen Antel,
  • Triinu Peters,
  • Konstanze Miehle,
  • Michael Stumvoll,
  • Johannes Hebebrand,
  • Haiko Schlögl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000526357

Abstract

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Introduction: Lipodystrophy (LD) syndromes are rare heterogeneous disorders characterized by reduction or absence of subcutaneous fat, low or non-detectable leptin concentrations in blood and impaired hunger/satiety regulation. Metreleptin treatment reverses metabolic complications and improves eating behavior in LD. Because depression in anorexia nervosa (AN), which is also characterized by hypoleptinemia, improves substantially upon treatment with metreleptin, we hypothesized, that metreleptin substitution may be associated with an antidepressant effect in patients with LD, too. Methods: In this ancillary study ten adult patients with LD were treated with metreleptin. To assess depressive symptoms, the self-rating questionnaire Beck’s Depression Inventory (BDI) was filled in at pre-established time points prior (T1) and after initiation of metreleptin (T2: 1 week; T3: 4 weeks; T4: 12 weeks) dosing. The differences between time points were tested with nonparametric Friedman's analysis of variance. Sensitivity analyses were performed upon exclusion of the BDI items addressing appetite and weight changes. Results: According to their BDI scores, four patients had mild depression and two had moderate depression at baseline. Friedman’s test revealed significant differences in BDI scores between the four time points. Post-hoc analyses revealed that the difference between T1 and T3 was significant upon Bonferroni correction (p=0.034, effect size r=0.88). The sensitivity analyses upon exclusion of the appetite and weight change items again revealed a significant Friedman’s test and significant Bonferroni corrected differences in the revised BDI scores between T1 vs. T2 (p=0.002, r=0.99) and T1 vs. T3 (p=0.007, r=0.79). Discussion/Conclusion: Our study for the first time revealed suggestive evidence for an antidepressant effect of metreleptin in patients with LD. Metreleptin caused a rapid drop in depression scores within one week of treatment. A reduction of the depression score was also observed in two of the three LD patients whose BDI scores were in the normal range before start of the treatment. The reduction in total scores of BDI were still apparent after three months (T4) of dosing. This observation matches findings obtained in clinical case studies of AN patients, in whom depression scores also dropped during the first week of metreleptin treatment.