Journal of the Endocrine Society Journal Article

Cortisol, Testosterone, and Abdominal Fat Mass in PCOS

August 22, 2023
 

Daniel A Dumesic, Adina F Turcu, Haiping Liu, Tristan R Grogan, David H Abbott, Gwyneth Lu, Devyani Dharanipragada, Gregorio D Chazenbalk
Journal of the Endocrine Society, Volume 7, Issue 8, August 2023, bvad079
https://doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad079

Abstract

Context

Ovarian and adrenal steroidogenesis underlie endocrine-metabolic dysfunction in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Adipocytes express aldo-keto reductase 1C3 and type 1 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, which modulate peripheral androgen and cortisol production.

Objectives

To compare serum adrenal steroids, including 11-oxygenated androgens (11-oxyandrogens), cortisol, and cortisone between normal-weight women with PCOS and body mass index- and age-matched ovulatory women with normal-androgenic profiles (controls), and assess whether adrenal steroids associate with abdominal adipose deposition.

Design

Prospective, cross-sectional, cohort study.

Setting

Academic medical center.

Patients

Twenty normal-weight women with PCOS and 20 body mass index-/age-matched controls.

Intervention(s)

Blood sampling, IV glucose tolerance testing, and total-body dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry.

Main Outcome Measure(s)

Clinical characteristics, hormonal concentrations, and body fat distribution.

Results

Women with PCOS had higher serum total/free testosterone (T) and androstenedione (A4) levels and a greater android/gynoid fat mass than controls (androgens P < .001; android/gynoid fat mass ratio, P = .026). Serum total/free T and A4 levels correlated positively with android/gynoid fat mass ratio in all women combined (P < .025, all values). Serum 11ß-hydroxyA4, 11-ketoA4, 11ß-hydroxyT, 11-ketoT, cortisol, and cortisone levels were comparable between female types and unrelated to body fat distribution. Serum 11-oxyandrogens correlated negatively with % total body fat, but lost significance adjusting for cortisol. Serum cortisol levels, however, correlated inversely with android fat mass (P = .021), with a trend toward reduced serum cortisol to cortisone ratio in women with PCOS vs controls (P = .075), suggesting diminished 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity.

Conclusion

Reduced cortisol may protect against preferential abdominal fat mass in normal-weight PCOS women with normal serum 11-oxyandrogens.

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