The cloning of the
obese gene and the characterization of its protein product, leptin, has permitted the study of a new hormone potentially involved
in the regulation of adipose tissue mass. The present study examined the gender differences in fasting plasma leptin concentration
and its relationship to body fatness, adipose tissue distribution and the metabolic profile in samples of 91 men (mean age
± SD: 37.3 ± 4.8 years) and 48 women (38.5 ± 6.8 years). Plasma leptin concentrations were strongly associated with body fat
mass measured by underwater weighing [men:
r = 0.80,
p < 0.0001; women:
r = 0.85,
p < 0.0001]. In both genders, plasma leptin levels were also strongly correlated with waist girth as well as cross-sectional
areas of abdominal subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue measured by computed tomography. Women had, on average, plasma
leptin concentrations that were three times higher than men. Furthermore, this gender difference remained significant when
comparing men and women matched for similar levels of body fat mass. The associations between plasma leptin and lipoprotein
concentrations were dependent of adiposity. In both men and women, elevated fasting plasma leptin levels were associated with
higher plasma insulin concentrations, but only in women was the association maintained after correction for fat mass. Thus,
results of the present study show that women have higher plasma leptin levels compared to men, independent of the concomitant
variation in total body fat mass. Furthermore, our results also suggest that, in women, the association between plasma leptin
and insulin concentrations is independent of adiposity, a finding which provides further support to the observation that adipose
tissue leptin secretion may be upregulated by insulin. [Diabetologia (1997) 40: 1178–1184]
Keywords Leptin - gender differences - insulin - lipoproteins.
Received: 18 February 1997 and in revised form: 28 April 1997