Circulating estradiol and its biologically active metabolites in endometriosis and in relation to pain symptoms

Author:

Emond Jean-Philippe,Caron Patrick,Pušić Maja,Turcotte Véronique,Simonyan David,Vogler Andrej,Osredkar Joško,Rižner Tea Lanišnik,Guillemette Chantal

Abstract

ObjectivesEndometriosis (EM) is an estrogen-dominant inflammatory disease linked to infertility that affects women of reproductive age. EM lesions respond to hormonal signals that regulate uterine tissue growth and trigger inflammation and pain. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether estradiol (E2) and its biologically active metabolites are differentially associated with EM given their estrogenic and non-estrogenic actions including proliferative and inflammatory properties.DesignWe performed a retrospective study of 209 EM cases and 115 women without EM.MethodsPain-related outcomes were assessed using surveys with validated scales. Preoperative serum levels of estradiol (E2) and estrone (E1), their 2-, 4- and 16- hydroxylated (OH) and methylated (MeO) derivatives (n=16) were measured by mass spectrometry. We evaluated the associations between estrogen levels and EM anatomic sites, surgical stage, risk of EM, and symptoms reported by women. Spearman correlations established the relationships between circulating steroids.ResultsOf the sixteen estrogens profiled, eleven were detected above quantification limits in most individuals. Steroids were positively correlated, except 2-hydroxy 3MeO-E1 (2OH-3MeO-E1). Higher 2OH-3MeO-E1 was linked to an increased risk of EM (Odd ratio (OR)=1.91 (95%CI 1.09-3.34); P=0.025). Ovarian EM cases displayed enhanced 2-hydroxylation with higher 2MeO-E1 and 2OH-E1 levels (P< 0.009). Abdominal, pelvic and back pain symptoms were also linked to higher 2OH-3MeO-E1 levels (OR=1.86; 95%CI 1.06-3.27; P=0.032).ConclusionsThe 2-hydroxylation pathway emerges as an unfavorable feature of EM, and is associated with ovarian EM and pain related outcomes.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canada Research Chairs

Javna Agencija za Raziskovalno Dejavnost RS

Horizon 2020

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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