Application of Biomarkers in Obese Infertile Women: A Genetic Tool for a Personalized Treatment
Charalampos Voros, Kyriakos Bananis, Angeliki Papapanagiotou, Abraham Pouliakis, Konstantina Mavriki, Ioannis Gkaniatsos, Maria Anastasia Daskalaki, Ioannis Prokopakis, Charalampos Tsimpoukelis, Aristotelis-Marios Koulakmanidis, Menelaos Darlas, Sofia Anysiadou

TL;DR
This study explores how genetic factors and bariatric surgery affect fertility in obese women, suggesting personalized treatment approaches.
Contribution
The study identifies genetic markers linked to reproductive hormones in obese infertile women post bariatric surgery.
Findings
Bariatric surgery led to significant BMI reduction in obese infertile women.
FSH levels varied significantly based on FSHR gene polymorphism pre and post surgery.
E2 and LH levels showed no significant genotype-based differences before or after surgery.
Abstract
This study investigates links between CART and leptin gene expression, FSH receptor Asn680Ser polymorphism, and reproductive hormones in morbidly obese patients under 40 years old, facing infertility, and undergoing bariatric surgery. A total of 29 women were included in this study. A hormonal profile along with detection of CART and leptin gene expression was evaluated before and after bariatric surgery. Additionally, the presence or absence of Asn680Ser of the FSHR gene was studied. Following bariatric surgery, a mean reduction in BMI (16.03 kg/m2) was observed in all women. FSH levels preoperatively varied significantly among genotypes, with medians of 8.1, 9.5, and 10.3 for individuals without polymorphism, heterozygotes, and homozygotes, respectively (p = 0.0408). Post surgery, marginal differences in FSH levels were observed (5.8, 7.1, and 8.2, respectively) (p = 0.0356). E2 and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBirth, Development, and Health · Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Diet and metabolism studies
