Current concepts in the polycystic ovary syndrome

Annual Review of Medicine, 52(1), 401-419, 2001

Abstract

Over the past 20 years, it has been clearly documented that the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) has major metabolic sequelae related to insulin resistance and that insulin resistance plays an important role in the pathogenesis of the reproductive disturbances of the disorder. Family studies have indicated a genetic susceptibility to PCOS. Polycystic ovaries and hyperandrogenemia are present in approximately 50% of sisters of affected women. Increased androgen secretion and insulin resistance persist in cultured theca cells and skin fibroblasts, respectively, from women with PCOS; this finding suggests that these are intrinsic, presumably genetic, defects. Insulin resistance and elevated low-density lipoprotein (LDL) levels also cluster in the sisters of women with PCOS, consistent with genetic traits. Moreover, the brothers of women with PCOS have insulin resistance and elevated dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) levels, which supports a genetic basis for these findings. Family-based studies of linkage and association have implicated several genes in the pathogenesis of PCOS. The strongest evidence to date points to a gene in the region of the insulin receptor. Insulin-sensitizing therapy mitigates the reproductive disturbances of PCOS.

polycystic ovary syndrome pathophysiology, pcos insulin resistance genetics, pcos family history inheritance, hyperandrogenism insulin resistance, pcos metabolic features, insulin sensitizing therapy pcos, pcos reproductive disturbances treatment, polycystic ovaries genetic susceptibility, pcos androgen secretion mechanisms, insulin receptor gene pcos, pcos root cause treatment

Dunaif, A., & Thomas, A. (2001). Current concepts in the polycystic ovary syndrome. *Annual Review of Medicine*, *52*(1), 401-419. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.med.52.1.401