4.7 Article

Menstrual dysfunction in polycystic ovary syndrome: association with dynamic state insulin resistance rather than hyperandrogenism

Journal

FERTILITY AND STERILITY
Volume 115, Issue 6, Pages 1557-1568

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2020.12.015

Keywords

Dynamic state; insulin resistance; menstrual dysfunction; PCOS

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-DK073632, R01-HD29364]
  2. Helping Hand of Los Angeles, Inc.

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In women with PCOS, those with menstrual cycle abnormalities have higher levels of insulin resistance (IR) but not hyperandrogenism (HA), suggesting that IR, and not HA, plays a role in determining the degree of menstrual dysfunction and can be used as a clinical marker for IR in PCOS.
Objective: To examine the relation of menstrual cyclicity abnormalities to hyperandrogenism (HA) and dynamic state insulin resis-tance (IR) in oligo-ovulatory women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Design: Prospective cross-sectional study. Setting: Tertiary-care academic center. Patient(s): Fifty-seven women with PCOS (1990 National Institutes of Health criteria) and 57 healthy control women matched by body mass index (BMI). Intervention(s): Short insulin tolerance test (ITT). Main Outcome Measure(s): Menstrual cyclicity, sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), measures of HA (i.e., modified Ferriman-Gallwey score, total and free testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate), and the rate constant for plasma glucose disappearance (kITT) derived from the short ITT. Result(s): Adjusting for age, BMI, and ethnicity, the mean androgen measures were higher and SHBG trended lower, kITT was lower, and the prevalence of IR was higher in PCOS than in controls, independent of menstrual cyclicity. The optimal cutoff point for IR was set at kITT value of 3.57%/minute or lower. Overall, 79% of the women with PCOS had IR. To control further for the effect of ethnicity, a subgroup of 46 non-Hispanic white PCOS participants were studied; those who exhibited amenorrhea (n = 15) or oligomenorrhea (n = 19) had or tended toward having a lower kITT and a higher prevalence of IR than the women with PCOS and oligo-ovulatory eumenorrhea (n = 12). The kITT trended lower and the prevalence of IR trended higher in women with PCOS and amenorrhea than those with oligomenorrhea. The measures of SHBG and HA were similar across the three menstrual groups. Conclusion(s): Oligo-ovulatory women with PCOS and overt oligo/amenorrhea have greater degrees of IR but not HA when compared with oligo-ovulatory eumenorrheic women with PCOS, suggesting that IR and hyperinsulinemia but not HA play a role in determining the degree of menstrual dysfunction, which can be used as a clinical marker for the degree of IR in oligo-ovulatory PCOS. ((C)2020 by American Society for Reproductive Medicine.)

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