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饮食、身体活动和久坐行为对多囊卵巢综合征女性和非多囊卵巢综合征女性体重指数的影响。

The contribution of diet, physical activity and sedentary behaviour to body mass index in women with and without polycystic ovary syndrome.

机构信息

Women's Public Health Research, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3168, Australia.

出版信息

Hum Reprod. 2013 Aug;28(8):2276-83. doi: 10.1093/humrep/det256. Epub 2013 Jun 15.

Abstract

STUDY QUESTION

What is the contribution of diet, physical activity and sedentary behaviour to body mass index (BMI) in women with and without polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)?

SUMMARY ANSWER

PCOS status, higher energy intake and glycaemic index and lower physical activity were independently associated with BMI.

WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY

Obesity worsens the clinical features of PCOS and women with PCOS have an elevated prevalence of overweight and obesity. It is not known whether there is a contribution of lifestyle factors such as dietary intake, physical activity or sedentary behaviour to the elevated prevalence of obesity in PCOS.

STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: This study is a population-based observational study with data currently collected at 13 year follow-up. The study commenced in 1996. For this analysis, data are analysed at one time point corresponding to the Survey 5 of the cohort in 2009. At this time 8200 participants remained (58% retention of baseline participants) of which 7466 replied to the questionnaire; 409 self-reported a diagnosis of PCOS and 7057 no diagnosis of PCOS.

PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Australian women born in 1973-1978 from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health.

MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE

Mean BMI was higher in women with PCOS compared with non-PCOS (29.3 ± 7.5 versus 25.6 ± 5.8 kg/m(2), P < 0.001). Women with PCOS reported a better dietary intake (elevated diet quality and micronutrient intake and lower saturated fat and glycaemic index intake) but increased energy intake, increased sitting time and no differences in total physical activity compared with non-PCOS. PCOS status, higher energy intake and glycaemic index and lower physical activity, as well as age, smoking, alcohol intake, occupation, education and country of birth, were independently associated with BMI.

LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: The weaknesses of this study include the self-reported diagnosis of PCOS, and the women not reporting PCOS not having their control status clinically verified which is likely to underrepresent the PCOS population. We are also unable to determine if lifestyle behaviours contributed to the PCOS diagnosis or were altered in response to diagnosis.

WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS

The strengths of this study include the community-based nature of the sample which minimizes selection bias to include women with a variety of clinical presentations. These results are therefore generalizable to a broader population than the majority of research in PCOS examining this research question which are performed in clinic-based populations. This study is in agreement with the literature that PCOS is independently associated with elevated BMI. We provide new insights that diet quality is subtly improved but that sedentary behaviour is elevated in PCOS and that PCOS status, higher energy intake and glycaemic index and lower physical activity are independently associated with BMI.

STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): L.J.M. was supported by a South Australian Cardiovascular Research Development Program (SACVRDP) Fellowship (AC11S374); a program collaboratively funded by the National Heart Foundation of Australia, the South Australian Department of Health and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, S.A.M. was funded by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT100100581), S.Z. was funded by a Heart Foundation Career Development Fellowship (ID CR10S5330) and H.J.T. was funded by an NHMRC fellowship (ID 545888). None of the authors has any conflict of interest to declare.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER

Not applicable.

摘要

研究问题

多囊卵巢综合征(PCOS)女性和非 PCOS 女性的饮食、身体活动和久坐行为对体重指数(BMI)的贡献如何?

总结答案

PCOS 状态、较高的能量摄入和血糖指数以及较低的身体活动与 BMI 独立相关。

已知情况

肥胖会使 PCOS 的临床特征恶化,而患有 PCOS 的女性超重和肥胖的患病率较高。目前尚不清楚饮食摄入、身体活动或久坐行为等生活方式因素是否对 PCOS 中肥胖的高发率有贡献。

研究设计、规模和持续时间:这是一项基于人群的观察性研究,目前在 13 年的随访中收集数据。该研究于 1996 年开始。在这项分析中,数据在 2009 年队列的调查 5 时进行了分析,此时有 8200 名参与者(基线参与者的 58%保留),其中 409 名自我报告患有 PCOS,7057 名没有诊断出 PCOS。

参与者/材料、地点和方法:澳大利亚女性,1973-1978 年出生,来自澳大利亚女性健康纵向研究。

主要结果和机会的作用

与非 PCOS 女性相比,患有 PCOS 的女性的平均 BMI 更高(29.3 ± 7.5 与 25.6 ± 5.8 kg/m²,P < 0.001)。患有 PCOS 的女性报告饮食质量更高(微量营养素摄入增加,饱和脂肪和血糖指数摄入减少),但能量摄入增加,久坐时间增加,总身体活动量无差异与非 PCOS 女性相比。PCOS 状态、较高的能量摄入和血糖指数以及较低的身体活动,以及年龄、吸烟、饮酒、职业、教育和出生地,与 BMI 独立相关。

局限性、谨慎的原因:本研究的局限性包括自我报告的 PCOS 诊断,以及没有报告 PCOS 的女性没有接受临床验证其对照状态,这可能会低估 PCOS 人群。我们也无法确定生活方式行为是否导致了 PCOS 诊断,或者是否对诊断做出了反应。

研究结果的更广泛意义

本研究的优势包括样本的基于社区的性质,最大限度地减少了选择偏差,纳入了具有各种临床表现的女性。因此,这些结果比大多数研究 PCOS 的研究更具普遍性,这些研究在诊所人群中进行了研究这个研究问题。这项研究与文献一致,即 PCOS 与 BMI 升高独立相关。我们提供了新的见解,即饮食质量略有改善,但久坐行为增加,并且 PCOS 状态、较高的能量摄入和血糖指数以及较低的身体活动与 BMI 独立相关。

研究资金/利益冲突:L.J.M. 得到了南澳大利亚心血管研究发展计划(SACVRDP)奖学金(AC11S374)的支持;该计划由澳大利亚心脏基金会、南澳大利亚卫生部和南澳大利亚健康与医学研究所以及 S.A.M. 的支持。S.A.M. 得到了澳大利亚研究理事会未来奖学金(ID CR10S5330)的资助,S.Z. 得到了心脏基金会职业发展奖学金(ID 545888)的资助。作者均无任何利益冲突。

试验注册编号

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