ECE2016 Eposter Presentations Bone & Osteoporosis (40 abstracts)
1Department of Nuclear Medicine, Papageorgiou Hospital, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece; 2Unit of Reproductive Endocrinology, 1st Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Medical School, Thessaloniki, Greece; 3Department of Endocrinology, 424 General Military Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Introduction: Adipokines and ghrelin exert well-documented effects on energy expenditure and glucose metabolism. Experimental data also support a role in bone metabolism, although data from clinical studies are conflicting. The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to investigate the association of serum concentrations of leptin, adiponectin and ghrelin with bone mineral density (BMD) in post-menopausal women.
Methods/design: BMD in lumbar spine and femoral neck, and circulating leptin, adiponectin and ghrelin concentrations were measured in 110 healthy post-menopausal women. Patients with secondary causes of osteoporosis were excluded.
Results: Osteoporosis was diagnosed in 30 (27%) women and osteopenia in 54 (49%). Serum leptin concentrations were positively correlated with both lumbar spine (r=0.343, P<0.01) and femoral neck BMD (r=0.370, P<0.01). Adiponectin concentrations were negatively associated with BMD at both sites (r=−0.321, P<0.01 and r=−0.448, P<0.01 respectively). No significant correlation between ghrelin concentrations and BMD was found. Osteoporotic women had lower body weight, BMI and leptin concentrations, but higher adiponectin concentrations compared with non-osteoporotic women. In multivariate stepwise regression analysis, the association of adiponectin concentrations with BMD remained significant only for femoral neck, after adjustment for body weight or BMI.
Conclusions: An inverse association between adiponectin and femoral neck BMD was found in post-menopausal women, independently of body weight. The positive association between leptin and BMD was dependent on body weight, whereas no effect of ghrelin on BMD was evident.