Leptin, a hormone produced by adipose tissue, is potentially involved in the regulation of adiposity. The effects of insulin and body fat distribution on human plasma leptin have not yet been clearly defined. The present study investigated the relationships between plasma leptin and total and regional body fat parameters measured by anthropometry and bienergetic absorptiometry associated or not with computed tomography, taking glucose metabolism into account. A cohort of 51 obese Caucasian women (23 with normal glucose tolerance, 11 with impaired glucose tolerance, and 17 with Type 2 diabetes) was analysed. All non-diabetic subjects had an oral glucose tolerance test together with plasma glucose and insulin measurements. Moreover, a subgroup of 7 diabetic subjects with failure to oral antidiabetic treatment was submitted to about 12 days of intensive subcutaneous insulin therapy. Plasma leptin was essentially dependent on total body fat mass (r = 0.83, p < 0.0001, for the whole population), but not related to adipose tissue distribution. An independent correlation between leptin adjusted on body fat mass and fasting insulinaemia (R = 0.72, p < 0.02) or C-peptide (R = 0.62, p < 0.03) was found significant only in the diabetic group. Insulin treatment was associated with a moderate and transient increase of plasma leptin. The relative variations of plasma leptin levels were strongly negatively correlated with those of free fatty acids. The present data confirm that plasma leptin is not dependent on body fat distribution and suggest an indirect effect of insulin on leptin secretion in clinical conditions.