Yi Yan, El Khoudary Samar R, Buchanich Jeanine M, Miller Rachel G, Rubinstein Debra, Matthews Karen, Orchard Trevor J, Costacou Tina
Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Department of Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Menopause. 2021 Mar 1;28(6):634-641. doi: 10.1097/GME.0000000000001758.
Evidence suggests that insulin deficiency and hyperglycemia may disrupt the female reproductive system's normal function, leading to delayed menarche and premature ovarian aging. We thus compared the length of the reproductive period of women with type 1 diabetes (T1D) to women without diabetes.
Women with childhood-onset T1D (diagnosed in 1950-80) from the prospective Epidemiology of Diabetes Complications (EDC) study and nondiabetic women from the Pittsburgh site of the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN) were studied. Exclusion criteria comprised not having reached natural menopause, hysterectomy/oophorectomy before menopause, and sex hormone therapy during the menopausal transition. Reproductive history was self-reported. The historical and Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation hormonal algorithms were also used to assess menopause status.
Women in the T1D cohort (n = 105) were younger, more likely to be White, never smokers, with lower BMI and higher high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels (all P values < 0.05) compared with women without diabetes (n = 178). After covariate adjustment, T1D women were also older at menarche (0.5-y delay, P = 0.002) but younger at natural menopause (-2.0 y, P < 0.0001). Women with T1D thus experienced 2.5 fewer reproductive years compared to those without diabetes (P < 0.0001). These findings were restricted to the subgroup of women who were diagnosed with T1D before reaching menarche (n = 80).
Women with T1D onset before menarche have a shorter reproductive period compared with nondiabetic women, exhibiting delayed menarche and earlier natural menopause. Factors that may be related to a shorter reproductive period in T1D should be investigated.
有证据表明,胰岛素缺乏和高血糖可能会扰乱女性生殖系统的正常功能,导致月经初潮延迟和卵巢早衰。因此,我们比较了1型糖尿病(T1D)女性与非糖尿病女性的生殖期长度。
对来自糖尿病并发症前瞻性流行病学(EDC)研究的儿童期发病的T1D女性(1950 - 1980年诊断)和来自全国女性健康研究(SWAN)匹兹堡站点的非糖尿病女性进行了研究。排除标准包括未达到自然绝经、绝经前进行子宫切除术/卵巢切除术以及绝经过渡期间接受性激素治疗。生殖史由自我报告获得。还使用了历史和女性缺血综合征评估激素算法来评估绝经状态。
与非糖尿病女性(n = 178)相比,T1D队列中的女性(n = 105)更年轻,更可能是白人,从不吸烟,体重指数较低且高密度脂蛋白胆固醇水平较高(所有P值<0.05)。经过协变量调整后,T1D女性的月经初潮年龄也更大(延迟0.5年,P = 0.002),但自然绝经年龄更小(-2.0岁,P < 0.0001)。因此,与非糖尿病女性相比,T1D女性的生殖年限少2.5年(P < 0.0001)。这些发现仅限于月经初潮前被诊断为T1D的女性亚组(n = 80)。
月经初潮前发病的T1D女性与非糖尿病女性相比,生殖期较短,表现为月经初潮延迟和自然绝经提前。应研究可能与T1D生殖期较短相关的因素。