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Circulating GDF15 concentrations in girls with low birth weight: effects of prolonged metformin treatment.

Marta DíazGemma Carreras-BadosaJoan VillarroyaAleix Gavaldà-NavarroJudit BassolsFrancis de ZegherAbel López-BermejoFrancesc VillarroyaLourdes Ibañez
Published in: Pediatric research (2022)
Low birth weight followed by a rapid postnatal catch-up in weight predisposes individuals to a central distribution of body fat, which is reverted by metformin. Growth-and-differentiation-factor-15 (GDF15) is a peptide hormone that reduces food intake and lowers body weight; metformin is an exogenous GDF15 secretagogue. Serum GDF15 concentrations increase after 3 and 4 years on metformin and associate negatively with insulin, androgens, body fat, and visceral fat. Prepubertal intervention with metformin reduces central adiposity and insulin resistance in girls with low birth weight. GDF15 could mediate these effects, especially over the long term.
Keyphrases
  • low birth weight
  • preterm infants
  • human milk
  • preterm birth
  • body weight
  • randomized controlled trial
  • type diabetes
  • insulin resistance
  • adipose tissue
  • weight loss
  • growth hormone
  • glycemic control