1 / 51

Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome . John Miell University Hospital Lewisham Kings College Hospital . A heterogenous condition (or many conditions). Stein-Leventhal Syndrome (1935). Menstrual Irregularity Hirsutism, Acne, Alopecia Obesity

chuck
Download Presentation

Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome John Miell University Hospital Lewisham Kings College Hospital

  2. A heterogenous condition (or many conditions)

  3. Stein-Leventhal Syndrome(1935) • Menstrual Irregularity • Hirsutism, Acne, Alopecia • Obesity • Stein I and Leventhal M (1935) Amenorrhoea associated with bilateral polycystic ovaries. Am J Obst Gyn 29:181

  4. Hyperinsulinism, glucose intolerance and hyperandrogenism • Achard C and Thiers J (1921): Le virilisme pilaire et son association a l’insufficiance glycolytique (diabetes des femmes a barb) • Bulletin of the Academy of National Medicine

  5. Features of PCOS • Clinical: • Menstrual abnormalities • Anovulatory subfertility • Hirsutes, acne, alopecia • Weight gain • ?recurrent miscarriage

  6. Features of PCOS • Endocrine: • Elevated androgen • Elevated LH • Elevated estrogen and prolactin • Elevated androstenedione • Decreased SHBG

  7. Biochemistry not reliable • LH elevated in 40% • Serum testosterone not always elevated • In a study of 1741 women with PCOS confirmed on clinical features and USS only 28.9% had elevated testosterone

  8. Features of PCOS • Metabolic: • Insulin resistance • Impaired GT and T2 DM • Lipid abnormalities • Cardiovascular risks • Neoplastic risk (?)

  9. PCOS-Definition • Ovulatory dysfunction and clinical features of hyperandrogenism • Polycystic ovaries plus one or more of the clinical features

  10. Revised Diagnostic criteria for PCOS • 1999: • Chronic anovulation • Clinical/biochemical signs of hyperandrogenism and exclusion of other pathologies* • 2003: 2/3 of • Oligo and/or anovulation • Clinical/biochemical signs of hyperandrogenism • Polycystic ovaries

  11. USS appearance of PCO

  12. PCOS Definition Two out of the following • Oligo/anovulation • Clinical or Biochemical hyperandrogenism • PCO Rotterdam consensus meeting 2003

  13. Cause of PCOS 1 • Unknown - but probably a vicious cycle with a number of entry points: • Defect in insulin action and secretion - hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance • Neuroendocrine defect - high LH pulse frequency and amplitude • Defect of androgen synthesis - enhanced ovarian androgen production • Defect in cortisol metabolism - enhanced adrenal androgen production

  14. Cause of PCOS 2 • Insulin resistance -Hyperinsulinaemia -Increased ovarian androgen -inhibits SHBG production in liver -increased free Testosterone -inhibits IGFBP-1 production -more free IGF-I • Weight gain -hyperinsulinaemia

  15. Mechanism of hyperinsulinemia • Insulin resistance: Obese PCOS>obese>lean PCOS>Lean • Pancreatic Beta cell secretory dysfunction • Decreased hepatic clearance of insulin • Abnormal insulin signalling - • serine vs tyrosine phosphorylation • serine phosphorylation inhibits receptor TK activity and accentuates P450c17 activity

  16. Ovarian steroid biosynthesis

  17. Pathways leading to androgen excess in PCOS

  18. Increased cortisol metabolism • Increased adrenal androgen production may occur secondary to alteration in cortisol metabolism • Increased 5alphaR or reduced 11betaHSD may lead to reduced cortisol • This leads to increased ACTH (to maintain normal cortisol levels) at the expense of excess adrenal androgen stimulation

  19. Increased cortisol metabolism 5alpha reductase mediates conversion of testosterone to 5 alpha Dihydrotestosterone and cortisol to 5alpha dihydrocortisol

  20. Genetics of PCOS • High correlation between twin pairs for hyperinsulnemia and hyperandrogenism (monogenic trait, 2 alleles, autosomal locus) • Prospective study of 1st degree relatives of women with PCOS – 46% affected – half have hyperandrogenemia with regular cycles, half have PCOS • Association between PCOS and polymorphism at INS VNTR • No difference in polymorphisms at CYP17 (encoding P450c17a) • No real luck looking at follistatin or CYP11a (coding P450scc) • ?type I IGF receptor/insulin receptor

  21. Long term consequences of PCOS • Increased risk of diabetes • Increased risk of cardiovascular disease • Increased risk of carcinoma

  22. Increased risk of diabetes • Insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction precede Type2 DM • Up to 40% of PCOS have IGT or T2DM (vs 10.3% in normal population studies) • Legor et al (1999): 31.1% IGT (vs 7.8% in age, weight, race matched controls) and 7.5% frank diabetes (vs 1.0%). Lean PCOS – 10.3% IGT, 1.5% frank T2DM.

  23. Increased risk of diabetes • Gestational diabetes is very common in PCOS (? Role for Metformin in pregnancy).

  24. PCOS and cardiovascular disease • The metabolic syndrome: • Impaired glucose tolerance • Type 2 DM • Abdominal obesity • Adverse lipid profiles

  25. PCOS and cardiovascular disease • The metabolic syndrome • Diagnosis based on 3/5 of: • Fasting Triglycerides >1.7 mmol/L • HDL – C < 1.3 mmol/L • BP > 135/85 • FBG > 6 mmol/L • Waist circumference > 88cms

  26. PCOS and cardiovascular disease • Angiography reveals increased incidence in coronary artery disease in women with • Hirsutism (Wild et 1990) • USS evidence of PCO (Birdsall et al 1997)

  27. PCOS and cardiovascular disease • Follow up of women who have had wedge resection 7.4 fold increase in risk of MI

  28. PCOS and cardiovascular disease • 30 year follow up of 786 women fulfilling reasonable diagnostic criteria for PCOS ( Pierpoint et al 1998, Wild et al, 2000) • Increase in mortality/morbidity from diabetes and increased risk of non-fatal cerebrovascular disease. • No increase in deaths from heart disease • mean BMI was 27 kg/m2 • No increase in prevalence of T2DM in this study • ? Protective effects of unopposed estrogen and increased levels of VEGF

  29. PCOS and cardiovascular risk factors • Dyslipidemia – secondary to: • Elevated androgens, body fat distribution and hyperinsulinemia • Raised triglycerides • Marginal elevation of LDL • Reduced HDL • Raised small dense LDL-III • Increased hepatic lipase activity • Elevated plasminogen activator inhibitor, PAI-1 • ?Consequence of androgens or hyperinsulinemia.

  30. PCOS prevention of long term consequences • Advise to modify risk factors Lose weight – diet/exercise Stop smoking Insulin sensitisation (?) • Screen for diabetes

  31. Increased risk of cancer (??) • No powerful well controlled studies using accurately defined diagnostic criteria • Possibly no overall increased risk of cancer in practice (Venn et al, Lancet, 1999)

  32. Increased risk of cancer (??) • Endometrial cancer • Theoretical risk of amenorrhoea and unopposed estrogen • Mayo clinic – 3X increased risk of endometrial cancer in women with anovulation without hypoestrogenemia (prob PCOS – Coulam, ObsGyn, 1983) • BUT – no good studies, poordiagnostic criteria, retrospective analyses etc.

  33. Increased risk of cancer (??) • Breast cancer • Theoretical risk of amenorrhoea and unopposed estrogen • PCOS protective against Breast cancer in a self reported historical study (Odd ratio 0.52 (0.32-0.87 – Gammon 1991) • No significant excess deaths from Breast cancer in a large group of PCOS (Pierpoint, J Clin Epidemiol, 1998)

  34. Increased risk of cancer (??) • Ovarian cancer • The jury is out • 2 studies suggest an increased risk - possibly both subject to recall bias • 3 studies suggest no increased risk

  35. Treatment • Depends on Symptoms

  36. Clinical Presentation • Oligo/amenorrhoea • Subfertility • Obesity • Acne • Hirsutism

  37. Exercise and weight loss • Improves insulin sensitivity • Reduces serum testosterone • Improves menstrual regularity • Induces regular ovulation

  38. Visceral fat • Responsible for the adverse effects of obesity • Strong correlation with insulin resistance

  39. Obesity and PCOS • Waist circumference is better guide to metabolic risk factors than is waist:hip ratio or BMI • waist ideally should be < 87cm ( and possibly <79cm) • Exercise is more important than diet in reducing visceral fat and correcting metabolic abnormalities

  40. Oligo/amenorrhoeaRisk of endometrial pathology • Combined oral contraceptive • Cyclical progestagen OR • Annual TVS assessment of endometrium

  41. Treatment of Hirsutism • Shaving, Electrolysis or waxing • Ornithine decarboxylase inhibitors • COC • Cyproterone acetate • Spironolactone • Flutamide and Finasteride • Metformin

  42. Hirsutism • Oestrogen suppresses ovarian testosterone Increases SHBG • Cyproterone acetate (progestogen) Androgen antagonist Suppresses LH

  43. Oral contraceptive • Ethinyl oestradiol 35mcg Cyproterone Acetate 2mg • Ethinyl Oestradiol 30 or 50mcg Desogestrel 150mcg Equally effective in treatment of Hirsutism Porcile & Gallardo 1991 Ethinyl oestradiol +drosperinone

  44. Reverse sequential Regime • Dianette Plus Cyproterone acetate 50-100mg day 1-10 of pill packet Earlier improvement in hirsutism Barth et al 1991

  45. Metformin • Reduces insulin resistance • 1000mg -1500mg daily • reduces serum insulin • reduces serum testosterone • Improves lipid profile • Improves menstrual irregularity • Improves fertility

  46. Metformin & Clomiphene • 61 women with BMI>28 • Received Metformin 500mg tds or placebo

  47. Metformin and clomiphene • Metfomin 34% ovulated • Placebo 4% ovulated • Metformin + clomiphene 90% ovulated • Placebo + Clomiphene 8% ovulated

  48. PCOS - conclusions • Insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, unusual gonadotrophin dynamics • Familial though no stron evidence of candidate gene identity • Links with obesity, cardiovascular disease, DM and maybe endometrial cancer • Needs lifestyle modification which remains the mainstay of treatment • Metformin has been a revelation

  49. Surgical or medical treatment of PCOS And/or

More Related