Pre‐polycystic ovary syndrome and polymenorrhoea as new facets of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS): Evidences from a single centre data set

Author:

Ganie Mohd Ashraf12ORCID,Rashid Aafia2,Baba Mohammad Salem1,Zargar Mohd Afzal3,Wani Imtiyaz Ahmad2,Nisar Sobia4,Wani Ishfaq Ahmad2,Douhath Syed2,Sriwastawa Mukesh5,Geer Mohd Ishaq6,Asrar Mir Mohd2,Kutum Rintu78,Hassan Saqib9,Khan Shahid10,Rafi Wajid11,Bhat Dil Afroz12,Showkat Wasia2,Sahar Tajali2,Choh Naseer Ahmad13,Khurshid Rabia14,Mudassar Syed12,Shah Zafar Amin15,Shabir Iram16,Sofi Sanjeed Ahmad13,Gupta Nandita11,Hafeez Imran17,Sreenivas Vishnubatla18

Affiliation:

1. Department of Endocrinology Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

2. Department of Clinical Research Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

3. Department of Life Sciences Central University of Kashmir Ganderbal India

4. Department of Medicine Government Medical College Srinagar India

5. Department of Microbiology and Immunology University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

6. Department of Pharmacology University of Kashmir Srinagar India

7. Department of Computer Science Ashoka University Sonepath India

8. Department of Computer Science, Trivedi School of Biosciences Ashoka University Sonepath India

9. Department of Biotechnology School of Bio and Chemical Engineering, Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology (Deemed University) Chennai India

10. Department of Lab Medicine AIIMS New Delhi New Delhi India

11. Department of Endocrinology All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

12. Department of Clinical Biochemistry Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

13. Department of Radiodiagnosis and Imaging Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

14. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

15. Department of Immunology and Molecular Medicine Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

16. Department of Biochemistry Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

17. Department of Cardiology Sheri‐Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences Srinagar India

18. Department of Biostatistics All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

Abstract

AbstractObjectivePolycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a complex disorder with diverse metabolic implications. Diagnosis typically relies on oligo‐amenorrhoea (OA), hyperandrogenism (HA), and polycystic ovarian morphology (PCOM). However, the role of polymenorrhoea in PCOS remains understudied. Additionally, limited information exists regarding metabolic disturbances in women with partial PCOS phenotypes that do not meet diagnostic criteria. This extensive database aims to provide substantial evidence on the metabolic implications of polymenorrhoea and partial PCOS phenotypes.DesignProspective observational study.Patients and MeasurementsIn this single‐centre study, 6463 women with PCOS‐like characteristics and 3142 age‐matched healthy women were included. The study compared clinical (anthropometry, modified Ferriman Gallwey [mFG] score), hormonal (serum testosterone), and metabolic (plasma glucose, serum lipids, insulin) characteristics between women diagnosed with PCOS, those with partial PCOS phenotypes, and the healthy control groupResultsIn all, 5174 women met Rotterdam criteria for PCOS diagnosis, while 737 were classified as Pre‐PCOS, including HA (n = 538), OA (n = 121), or PCOM (n = 78). Common clinical features included oligomenorrhoea (75.5%), hirsutism (82.9%), obesity (27.2%), hypertension (1.6%), metabolic syndrome (19.6%), and diabetes mellitus (5.6%). Women diagnosed with PCOS, HA only, and OA only exhibited higher average body mass index, plasma glucose levels (both fasting and 2 h after the oral glucose tolerance test), and lipid fractions in comparison to those with PCOM and the healthy controls. However, indices of insulin resistance were similar among women with PCOS, HA, PCOM, and OA, albeit higher than in the healthy controls. The polymenorrhoea subgroup (5.9%) had lower BMI and serum testosterone, but similar mFG score, plasma glucose, insulin, and lipid levels as the oligomenorrhoea subgroup.ConclusionThe metabolic disturbances observed in Pre‐PCOS women highlight the need to reassess diagnostic criteria. Including the polymenorrhoea subcategory in PCOS criteria is recommended due to similar metabolic dysfunctions as the oligomenorrhoea group.

Funder

Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India

Indian Council of Medical Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Endocrinology

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