Longitudinal associations between cardiovascular biomarkers and metabolic syndrome during puberty: the PUBMEP study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
González Gil, Esther M.; Anguita Ruiz, Augusto; Gil Hernández, Ángel; Gil Campos, Mercedes; Aguilera García, Concepción MaríaEditorial
Springer
Materia
Puberty Metabolic syndrome Inflammation Cardiovascular risk
Fecha
2022-11-15Referencia bibliográfica
González-Gil, E.M... [et al.]. Longitudinal associations between cardiovascular biomarkers and metabolic syndrome during puberty: the PUBMEP study. Eur J Pediatr (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-022-04702-6]
Patrocinador
CRUE-CSIC agreement; Springer Nature; Plan Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica, Desarrollo e Innovacion Tecnologica (I + D + I), Instituto de Salud Carlos III-Health Research PI11/01425 PI11/02042 PI11/02059 PI16/01301 PI16/01205 PI16/00871 PI20/00563; CIBEROBN Network CB15/00131 CB15/00043; Redes tematicas de investigacion cooperativa RETIC Red SAMID RD12/0026/0015Resumen
Puberty has been described as a life stage of considerable metabolic risk specially for those with obesity. The low-grade systemic
inflammatory status associated with obesity could be one of the connections with metabolic syndrome (MetS). Thus, we
aimed to assess the relationship between inflammatory and cardiovascular biomarkers and the development of MetS during
puberty. Seventy-five children from the PUBMEP study (33 females), aged 4–18 years, were included. Cardiovascular and
inflammatory biomarkers were measured in the prepubertal and pubertal stage, including high-sensitivity C-reactive protein
(CRP), leptin, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα), interleukin 8 (IL8), monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), total
plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (tPAI), resistin, adiponectin, myeloperoxidase (MPO), and soluble intercellular adhesion
molecule-1 (sICAM-1). MetS was diagnosed at each measurement point. Mixed-effects and logistic regressions were performed.
Those children with MetS in puberty presented higher prepubertal values of several cardiometabolic biomarkers in
comparison to those without MetS (z-score body mass index (zBMI), waist circumference, insulin, HOMA-IR, leptin, and
tPAI (p < 0.05)). For prepubertal children with obesity, the odds of developing MetS in puberty were significantly higher in
those having high zBMI (OR = 4.27; CI: 1.39–22.59) or high concentrations of tPAI (OR = 1.19; CI: 1.06–1.43).
Conclusion: Those with obesity with higher prepubertal tPAI plasma levels had 19% higher odds of having MetS at puberty
highlighting the existence of association between MetS, obesity, and inflammation already in puberty. Thus, assessing cardiometabolic
and inflammatory status in children with obesity already at prepuberty is key to avoiding future comorbidities.