Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Division of Epidemiology, Statistics, and Prevention Research, Epidemiology Branch, 6100 Executive Boulevard, Room 7B03, MSC 7510, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010 Dec;95(12):5435-42. doi: 10.1210/jc.2010-0702. Epub 2010 Sep 15.
Conflicting findings have been reported regarding the effect of menstrual cycle phase and sex hormones on insulin sensitivity.
The aim was to determine the pattern of insulin resistance over the menstrual cycle and whether variations in sex hormones explain these patterns.
The BioCycle study is a longitudinal study that measured hormones at different phases of the menstrual cycle. Participants had up to eight visits per cycle; each visit was timed using fertility monitors to capture sensitive windows of hormonal changes.
The study was conducted in the general community of the University at Buffalo (Buffalo, NY).
A total of 257 healthy, premenopausal women (age, 27±8 yr; body mass index, 24±4 kg/m2) participated in the study.
We measured fasting insulin, glucose, and insulin resistance by the homeostasis model of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR).
Significant changes in HOMA-IR were observed over the menstrual cycle; from a midfollicular phase level of 1.35, levels rose to 1.59 during the early luteal phase and decreased to 1.55 in the late-luteal phase. HOMA-IR levels primarily reflected changes in insulin and not glucose. After adjustment for age, race, cycle, and other sex hormones, HOMA-IR was positively associated with estradiol (β=0.082; P<0.001) and progesterone (β=0.025; P<0.001), and inversely associated with FSH (adjusted β=-0.040; P<0.001) and SHBG (β=-0.085; P<0.001). LH was not associated with HOMA-IR. Further adjustment for BMI weakened the association with SHBG (β=-0.057; P=0.06) but did not affect other associations.
Insulin exhibited minor menstrual cycle variability. Estradiol and progesterone were positively associated with insulin resistance and should be considered in studies of insulin resistance among premenopausal women.
关于月经周期阶段和性激素对胰岛素敏感性的影响,已有相互矛盾的研究结果报告。
本研究旨在确定月经周期中胰岛素抵抗的模式,以及性激素的变化是否可以解释这些模式。
BioCycle 研究是一项纵向研究,在不同的月经周期阶段测量激素。参与者每个周期最多有 8 次就诊;每次就诊都使用生育监测器来确定激素变化的敏感窗口,以计时。
该研究在布法罗大学(纽约州布法罗)的社区中进行。
共有 257 名健康的绝经前女性(年龄 27±8 岁;体重指数 24±4kg/m2)参加了这项研究。
我们通过稳态模型评估胰岛素抵抗(HOMA-IR)测量空腹胰岛素、血糖和胰岛素抵抗。
在月经周期中观察到 HOMA-IR 显著变化;从中卵泡期的 1.35 水平升高到早期黄体期的 1.59,然后在黄体晚期降至 1.55。HOMA-IR 水平主要反映胰岛素的变化,而不是血糖的变化。在校正年龄、种族、周期和其他性激素后,HOMA-IR 与雌二醇(β=0.082;P<0.001)和孕酮(β=0.025;P<0.001)呈正相关,与 FSH(调整后β=-0.040;P<0.001)和 SHBG(β=-0.085;P<0.001)呈负相关。LH 与 HOMA-IR 无关。进一步调整 BMI 会削弱与 SHBG 的相关性(β=-0.057;P=0.06),但不会影响其他相关性。
胰岛素的月经周期变化较小。雌二醇和孕酮与胰岛素抵抗呈正相关,在研究绝经前女性的胰岛素抵抗时应予以考虑。