Pasquali R, Gambineri A, Biscotti D, Vicennati V, Gagliardi L, Colitta D, Fiorini S, Cognigni G E, Filicori M, Morselli-Labate A M
Department of Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology, S Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna, Italy.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2000 Aug;85(8):2767-74. doi: 10.1210/jcem.85.8.6738.
Abdominal obesity and hyperinsulinemia play a key role in the development of the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Dietary-induced weight loss and the administration of insulin-lowering drugs, such as metformin, are usually followed by improved hyperandrogenism and related clinical abnormalities. This study was carried out to evaluate the effects of combined hypocaloric diet and metformin on body weight, fat distribution, the glucose-insulin system, and hormones in a group of 20 obese PCOS women [body mass index (BMI) > 28 kg/m2] with the abdominal phenotype (waist to hip ratio >0.80), and an appropriate control group of 20 obese women who were comparable for age and pattern of body fat distribution but without PCOS. At baseline, we measured sex hormone, sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), and leptin blood concentrations and performed an oral glucose tolerance test and computerized tomography (CT) at the L4-L5 level, to measure sc adipose tissue area (SAT) and visceral adipose tissue area. All women were then given a low-calorie diet (1,200-1,400 kcal/day) alone for one month, after which anthropometric parameters and CT scan were newly measured. While continuing dietary treatment, PCOS women and obese controls were subsequently placed, in a random order, on metformin (850 mg/os, twice daily) (12 and 8, respectively) or placebo (8 and 12, respectively), according to a double-blind design, for the following 6 months. Blood tests and the CT scan were performed in each woman at the end of the study while they were still on treatment. During the treatment period, 3 women of the control group (all treated with placebo) were excluded because of noncompliance; and 2 PCOS women, both treated with metformin, were also excluded because they became pregnant. Therefore, the women cohort available for final statistical analysis included 18 PCOS (10 treated with metformin and 8 with placebo) and 17 control women (8 treated with metformin and 9 with placebo). The treatment was well tolerated. In the PCOS group, metformin therapy improved hirsutism and menstrual cycles significantly more than placebo. Baseline anthropometric and CT parameters were similar in all groups. Hypocaloric dieting for 1 month similarly reduced BMI values and the waist circumference in both PCOS and control groups, without any significant effect on CT scan parameters. In both PCOS and control women, however, metformin treatment reduced body weight and BMI significantly more than placebo. Changes in the waist-to-hip ratio values were similar in PCOS women and controls, regardless of pharmacological treatment. Metformin treatment significantly decreased SAT values in both PCOS and control groups, although only in the latter group were SAT changes significantly greater than those observed during the placebo treatment. On the contrary, visceral adipose tissue area values significantly decreased during metformin treatment in both PCOS and control groups, but only in the former was the effect of metformin treatment significantly higher than that of placebo. Fasting insulin significantly decreased in both PCOS women and controls, regardless of treatment, whereas glucose-stimulated insulin significantly decreased only in PCOS women and controls treated with metformin. Neither metformin or placebo significantly modified the levels of LH, FSH, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, and progesterone in any group, whereas testosterone concentrations decreased only in PCOS women treated with metformin. SHBG concentrations remained unchanged in all PCOS women; whereas in the control group, they significantly increased after both metformin and placebo. Leptin levels decreased only during metformin treatment in both PCOS and control groups. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
腹部肥胖和高胰岛素血症在多囊卵巢综合征(PCOS)的发生发展中起关键作用。饮食诱导的体重减轻以及使用胰岛素降低药物(如二甲双胍)后,通常会使高雄激素血症及相关临床异常情况得到改善。本研究旨在评估低热量饮食联合二甲双胍对20名肥胖PCOS女性[体重指数(BMI)>28 kg/m²](腹部表型,腰臀比>0.80)以及20名年龄和体脂分布模式与之匹配但无PCOS的肥胖女性组成的适当对照组的体重、脂肪分布、葡萄糖 - 胰岛素系统和激素的影响。在基线时,我们测量了性激素、性激素结合球蛋白(SHBG)和瘦素的血浓度,并进行了口服葡萄糖耐量试验以及L4 - L5水平的计算机断层扫描(CT),以测量皮下脂肪组织面积(SAT)和内脏脂肪组织面积。然后所有女性单独接受低热量饮食(1200 - 1400千卡/天)一个月,之后重新测量人体测量参数和CT扫描结果。在继续饮食治疗的同时,根据双盲设计,PCOS女性和肥胖对照组随后被随机安排服用二甲双胍(850毫克/口服,每日两次)(分别为12人和8人)或安慰剂(分别为8人和12人),持续6个月。在研究结束时,每位女性仍在接受治疗期间进行血液检查和CT扫描。在治疗期间,对照组有3名女性(均接受安慰剂治疗)因不依从被排除;2名接受二甲双胍治疗的PCOS女性也因怀孕被排除。因此,可供最终统计分析的女性队列包括18名PCOS患者(10名接受二甲双胍治疗,8名接受安慰剂治疗)和17名对照女性(8名接受二甲双胍治疗,9名接受安慰剂治疗)。治疗耐受性良好。在PCOS组中,二甲双胍治疗在改善多毛症和月经周期方面显著优于安慰剂。所有组的基线人体测量和CT参数相似。低热量饮食1个月同样降低了PCOS组和对照组的BMI值和腰围,对CT扫描参数无任何显著影响。然而,在PCOS女性和对照女性中,二甲双胍治疗比安慰剂更显著地降低了体重和BMI。无论药物治疗如何,PCOS女性和对照组的腰臀比值变化相似。二甲双胍治疗显著降低了PCOS组和对照组的SAT值,尽管仅在对照组中SAT的变化显著大于安慰剂治疗期间观察到的变化。相反,PCOS组和对照组在二甲双胍治疗期间内脏脂肪组织面积值均显著降低,但仅在PCOS组中二甲双胍治疗的效果显著高于安慰剂。无论治疗如何,PCOS女性和对照组的空腹胰岛素均显著降低,而仅在接受二甲双胍治疗的PCOS女性和对照组中,葡萄糖刺激的胰岛素显著降低。在任何组中,二甲双胍或安慰剂均未显著改变LH、FSH、硫酸脱氢表雄酮和孕酮的水平,而仅在接受二甲双胍治疗的PCOS女性中睾酮浓度降低。所有PCOS女性的SHBG浓度保持不变;而在对照组中,二甲双胍和安慰剂治疗后SHBG浓度均显著升高。仅在PCOS组和对照组的二甲双胍治疗期间瘦素水平降低。