Context: Polycystic ovary syndrome confers an increased risk for type 2 diabetes in affected women as early as adolescence. First-degree relatives (FDRs) of affected women are at increased risk for associated reproductive and metabolic phenotypes.
Objective: We sought to prospectively assess insulin sensitivity and secretion and to measure reproductive hormone levels using sensitive techniques.
Design, Setting, And Participants: Twelve premenarchal FDR girls and 10 control girls of comparable age, Tanner stage, and body mass index were studied at an academic medical center.
Interventions: Frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance tests and oral glucose tolerance tests were performed.
Main Outcome Measures: Reproductive hormone levels, lipid profiles, glucose tolerance, and frequently sampled iv glucose tolerance test parameters of insulin sensitivity and secretion were investigated.
Results: Disposition index (DI), insulin secretion corrected for insulin sensitivity, was decreased in FDR compared with control girls at baseline (P = .01), independent of dysglycemia. Decreases in DI persisted in FDR girls during the 2-year follow-up (P = .003). T levels were increased (P = .02) in FDR compared with control girls at baseline, but this difference did not persist because T levels increased in control girls.
Conclusions: DI is decreased in peripubertal FDR girls, and this decrease persists as puberty progresses. These findings suggest that β-cell dysfunction is an early defect in glucose homeostasis preceding decompensation in glucose tolerance in FDR girls. T levels were increased in FDR girls earlier than previously reported, but these changes did not persist, suggesting an earlier onset of pubertal increases in glandular androgen secretion in FDR girls.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4184072 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2014-1474 | DOI Listing |
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