{"id":21201,"date":"2021-04-21T20:15:14","date_gmt":"2021-04-21T19:15:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/touchendocrinology.com\/?p=21201"},"modified":"2022-02-09T16:06:26","modified_gmt":"2022-02-09T16:06:26","slug":"assessment-of-early-markers-of-cardiovascular-risk-in-polycystic-ovary-syndrome","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/touchendocrinology.com\/reproductive-endocrinology\/journal-articles\/assessment-of-early-markers-of-cardiovascular-risk-in-polycystic-ovary-syndrome\/","title":{"rendered":"Assessment of Early Markers of Cardiovascular Risk in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome"},"content":{"rendered":"
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a heterogeneous syndrome, considered the most common endocrinopathy in women of reproductive age, with a prevalence of 6\u20138% in premenopausal women.1,2<\/span>\u00a0However, long-term sequelae are extended beyond the reproductive axis, being present from birth to senescence. Consequently, early detection and treatment options are in high demand to prevent long-term complications. This review aims to summarize the evidence published regarding the cardiovascular risk factors that accompany PCOS.<\/p>\n We systematically searched and reviewed all relevant publications in PubMed up to February 2020 using the terms \u2018flow-mediated dilatation and PCOS\u2019 (55 results), \u2018plethysmography and PCOS\u2019 (4 results), and \u2018intima-media thickness and PCOS\u2019 (116 results). Reviews and studies without a control group to be compared with the PCOS group were excluded. Finally, we selected 104 research studies investigating cardiovascular risk factors in PCOS compared to controls, published between 1996 and 2020, and 35 studies (14 common) investigating cardiovascular risk factors in women with PCOS before and after therapeutic interventions, published between 2005 and 2020 (Tables 1<\/span>\u00a0<\/em>and\u00a02<\/em>, Figure 1<\/em><\/span>)<\/em>.3\u2013125<\/span><\/p>\n \u00a0 <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/a>Definition of polycystic ovary syndrome<\/p>\n PCOS is a heterogeneous syndrome that has remained a syndrome of unknown aetiology since its first description by Stein and Leventhal 85 years ago, and is probably one of the least understood endocrine disorders in women.126<\/span>\u00a0The clinical phenotype is determined by genetic and environmental factors.127<\/span>\u00a0In 2009, after a systematic review of the published literature, the Androgen Excess Society suggested that PCOS should be defined by the presence of hyperandrogenism (clinical and\/or biochemical), ovarian dysfunction (oligo-anovulation and\/or polycystic ovaries), and the exclusion of related disorders. Nevertheless, some endocrinologists have also addressed the possibility that there may be forms of PCOS without overt evidence of hyperandrogenism, but more data were required before validating this supposition.128<\/span>\u00a0Therefore, PCOS remains a diagnosis of exclusion, and it is evident that PCOS is a polyprismatic condition. The prevalence of different phenotypes and the actual clinical significance of different laboratory and imaging variables remain under continuous investigation in an effort to identify markers of the syndrome\u2019s severity and predictors of its long-term sequelae.<\/p>\n Metabolic and related features associated with polycystic ovary syndrome<\/p>\n The long-term effects of PCOS are attributed to several metabolic aberrations ensuing the syndrome, including ins<\/a>ulin resistance and hyperinsulinaemia, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), dyslipidaemia and other risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD).129\u2013132<\/span><\/p>\n Insulin resistance is regarded as the cornerstone of the syndrome\u2019s pathophysiology and seems to have detrimental effects on several target organs, justifying the characterization of PCOS as a multisystem disorder. An overlap between PCOS and insulin resistance or metabolic syndrome has been described, since these two clinical entities share common characteristics such as abdominal obesity, elevated serum triglyceride levels, low serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels, abnormal blood pressure (BP) and impaired carbohydrate metabolism.133,134<\/span>\u00a0The prevalence of metabolic syndrome in women with PCOS has been estimated to range from 43% to 46%.135,136<\/span>\u00a0More specifically, hyperinsulinaemia and insulin resistance play a critical role in the pathogenesis of PCOS and metabolic syndrome, which are both associated with a high risk for T2DM, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and atherosclerosis. Insulin resistance is present in approximately 50\u201375% of women with PCOS130<\/span>\u00a0and seems to be independent from obesity.137\u2013139<\/span>\u00a0<\/span>In 50% of women with PCOS, insulin resistance appears to be related to abnormal insulin-independent serine phosphorylation of the\u00a0\u03b2<\/span>-subunit of insulin receptor.130,140 <\/span>Reduced activity of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) was also found in muscle tissue of these patients.141<\/span><\/p>\n With regard to the criteria used to determine insulin resistance, it is known that the hyperinsulinaemic euglycemic clamp (HEC) remains the gold standard, but due to its complexity and invasiveness it is rarely used in practice compared with other methods, which may be less precise but are non-invasive and widely acceptable in clinical research (Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance [HOMA-IR], Quantitative Insulin Sensitivity Check Index [QUICKI]).142<\/span>\u00a0New markers have also been suggested as indirect criteria for insulin resistance, such as adipocytokines, leptin and ghrelin, but their accuracy is still under consideration.143<\/span>\u00a0In general, insulin resistance, regardless of the diagnostic criteria used, is the hallmark of PCOS as demonstrated by HEC;144<\/span>\u00a0whereas most studies are using control women to define insulin resistance.<\/p>\n Overweight and obesity, defined as a body mass index (BMI) within the range of 25.00\u201339.99 kg\/m2<\/span> (mild 25.00\u201329.99, and severe >30.00\u201339.99 kg\/m2<\/span>), have been shown to be more prevalent in women with PCOS and are further associated with hyperinsulinaemia and insulin resistance.145<\/span>\u00a0The prevalence of obesity in patients with PCOS differs depending on ethnicity, being less prevalent in Europe146<\/span>\u00a0and more common in the USA.147<\/span>\u00a0However, both lean and obese women with PCOS display central fat distribution.148\u2013150<\/span>\u00a0Additionally, obese premenopausal women with PCOS have a 31\u201335% incidence of impaired glucose tolerance, whereas 7.5\u201310.0% develop overt diabetes.151,152<\/span> Moreover, other clinical entities, such as non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease,153<\/span>\u00a0as well as obstructive sleep apnoea and excessive daytime sleepiness, have been associated with insulin resistance and PCOS (Figure 2<\/span><\/em>).154<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Parameter<\/a>s of cardiovascular disease<\/p>\n PCOS has been reported to bear an increased risk for atherosclerosis with a calculated increased risk (relative risk) of 7.4 for myocardial infarction.155<\/span>\u00a0An early sign of the atherogenic process, which results in overt CVD, is endothelial dysfunction,156<\/span> which has been comprehensively studied in PCOS. Since PCOS has been suggested to represent a female subtype of metabolic syndrome,134<\/span>\u00a0carrying a potential pre-atherogenic load, patients with PCOS have increased cardiovascular risk compared with age-matched controls.157<\/span>\u00a0Myocardial infarction was recorded to be seven times more likely in patients with histopathological evidence of PCO,155<\/span>\u00a0and cardiac catheterization studies have shown more extensive coronary artery disease in these patients than in women with normal ovaries.158<\/span>\u00a0Furthermore, significant subclinical carotid atherosclerosis has been demonstrated on carotid artery ultrasound in women with PCOS.3,5<\/span><\/p>\n This increased cardiovascular risk is likely to partly be a result of the metabolic disturbances associated with PCOS. Dyslipidaemia, diabetes (from impaired glucose tolerance to overt T2DM), and obesity are potentially cardiovascular risk factors that tend to cluster in women with PCOS.148,159<\/span>\u00a0Many previous studies have documented abnormalities of insulin metabolism in both lean and overweight women with PCOS.130,138,160,161<\/span>\u00a0Dyslipidaemia, insulin resistance and abdominal obesity are variable clinical features of PCOS which, irrespective of the presence An alternative explanation for the increased cardiovascular risk in PCOS is hyperandrogenism. Possible underlying pathophysiological mechanisms include a correlation between free testosterone and systolic BP,168<\/span>\u00a0and a link between increased androgens and abnormal lipid metabolism.169,170<\/span>\u00a0Nonetheless, the association between hyperandrogenism and cardiovascular risk is not universally accepted.170<\/span>\u00a0Previous studies of obese women with PCOS have shown that hyperinsulinaemia directly reduces sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG).171<\/span>\u00a0This has led to the hypothesis that SHBG might be a surrogate marker of insulin resistance in this population.172<\/span> Other studies, however, in both PCOS and non-PCOS populations suggest that BMI and percentage body fat, rather than insulin, are independent predictors of SHBG.173,174<\/span><\/p>\n Endothel<\/a>ial function and polycystic ovary syndrome<\/p>\n The endothelium is the target organ for a variety of metabolic risk factors. It has been demonstrated that insulin exerts a direct hypertrophic effect on the vascular endothelium and on the smooth muscle cells.175<\/span>\u00a0Abnormal vascular function has been shown in PCOS, and the syndrome has been associated with surrogate cardiovascular markers, such as increased serum levels of plasminogen-activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1),176<\/span>\u00a0elevated serum levels of C-reactive protein (CRP),177<\/span>\u00a0elevated advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) serum levels178<\/span> and echocardiographic abnormalities.179\u2013181<\/span>\u00a0The pathophysiology remains unclear but a number of mechanisms could be implicated to link endothelial dysfunction with insulin resistance, including disturbances of subcellular signalling pathways to insulin action or other potential unifying links.182<\/span>\u2013<\/span>184<\/span><\/p>\n Haemodynam<\/a>ic methods for endothelial function assessment in polycystic ovary syndrome<\/p>\n The endothelium plays a crucial role in regulating arterial function. Endothelial dysfunction is one of the best-understood preliminary steps in the development of atheromatous disease.185<\/span> It has been considered not only as a marker of early, possibly reversible, arterial abnormality, but also as a prognostic marker for future cardiovascular morbidity.186<\/span>\u00a0Endothelial dysfunction can be studied by haemodynamic methods, like brachial flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) and venous obstructive plethysmography (VOP) on peripheral arteries, which both examine different sections of arterial bed (macro- and microcirculation, respectively) and should be considered complementary, providing different information.21<\/span><\/p>\n The association between insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction has been demonstrated consistently in subjects with T2DM, obesity and metabolic syndrome.187<\/span>\u00a0Thus, at a mechanistic level, endothelial dysfunction appears to occur early in the insulin-resistant state; the progression of insulin resistance to diabetes in parallel to the progression of endothelial dysfunction to atherosclerosis.187<\/span>\u00a0There are several mechanisms through which insulin resistance can adversely affect the endothelium. Insulin-resistant states, such as T2DM, are characterized by increased production of free fatty acids and proinflammatory cytokines, such as tumour necrosis factor\u00a0\u03b1<\/span>\u00a0(TNF-\u03b1<\/span>) and leptin, which contribute to endothelial dysfunction.188<\/span>\u00a0There is also evidence to suggest that insulin resistance induces increased oxidant stress, which may have an important pathogenic role.175<\/span><\/p>\n Endothelial\u00a0dysfunction and flow-mediated dilatation in polycystic ovary syndrome<\/strong><\/p>\n Endothelial function can be estimated in conduit arteries (macrovascular function), non-invasively by high-resolution ultrasonography on the brachial artery, assessing FMD,189<\/span> an endothelial-dependent dilatation, which has been found to be correlated with coronary endothelial function,190<\/span>\u00a0consequently representing an independent predictor of cardiovascular events.191<\/span> In the first published study to investigate endothelial function by FMD in patients with PCOS, no difference was shown compared to control women.4<\/span>\u00a0However, few studies have confirmed these negative findings (Table 1<\/span>).3\u2013104<\/span><\/p>\n On the contrary, most studies undertaken in young women with PCOS, of normal weight or overweight and obese, confirm overt endothelial dysfunction. First, in young, lean women with PCOS, a 20% drop of FMD response has been shown, compared with normal women of a similar age and BMI.10<\/span>\u00a0Furthermore, the combination of FMD and the biochemical assessment by endothelin 1 (ET-1) plasma levels to assess endothelial dysfunction in young, overweight insulin resistant women with PCOS and controls, with similar age and BMI, documented impairment in women with PCOS, after exclusion of smooth muscle cells injury detected by nitrate-induce<\/a>d endothelial-independent dilatation (NID).15<\/span>\u00a0Other parallel studies confirmed FMD impairment along with NID impairment, implying a global vascular deficit.12,16<\/span>\u00a0In all these studies, insulin resistance had an impact on FMD,12,15,16<\/span>\u00a0whilst a tendency of FMD to deteriorate from lean to overweight and to obese women with PCOS was observed, even without reaching statistically significant differences.16<\/span>\u00a0Notably, in lean women with PCOS, FMD was found to be negatively influenced only by hyperandrogenaemia, and in overweight women by insulin resistance and hyperandrogenaemia.16<\/span> In an effort to correct for other cardiovascular risk factors, FMD and NID were assessed in a normoglycaemic, eulipidaemic, normal BP and normal glucose tolerance PCOS group, and a control group with comparable age, BMI and waist:hip ratio. FMD, but not NID, was impaired in women with PCOS who remained insulin-resistant.21<\/span>\u00a0Finally, in young overweight women with PCOS, FMD was impaired compared with ovulatory controls matched for age and BMI, and this alteration was correlated to insulin resistance but not to the adipokines measured.23<\/span>\u00a0Endothelial function has also been assessed by the use of novel technologies using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging, confirming pronounced endothelial dysfunction with normal endothelial independent dilatation in PCOS, compared with controls with similar age and BMI.27<\/span><\/p>\n We reviewed 39 studies that assessed FMD, and 27 (69%) of them, which included 1,359 patients with PCOS and 1,073 control subjects, showed impaired FMD in PCOS as opposed to 12 studies (including 448 patients with PCOS and 307 control subjects) that did not show any difference between these groups (Table 1<\/span>).3\u2013104<\/span>\u00a0On the contrary, endothelial independent dilatation has been found to be mostly normal in women with PCOS (seven studies with 232 patients with PCOS and 211 control subjects versus three studies with 129 patients with PCOS and 72 controls).<\/p>\n Venous occlusion plethysmography and microvascular function in polycystic ovary syndrome<\/strong><\/p>\n Microvascular function can be estimated in resistance arteries, and has been assessed in women with PCOS. In a HEC study in obese women with PCOS, a 50% reduced endothelial-dependent and Microvascular function has also been assessed, non-invasively, on resistance arteries by VOP on the forearm in women with PCOS who were normoglycaemic, eulipidaemic, and normotensive, compared with controls of comparable age, BMI and waist:hip ratio.21<\/span>\u00a0The only parameter that differed between groups was time to peak hyperaemia, a parameter considered to reflect endothelial dysfunction, which was found protracted in the more insulin-resistant women with PCOS.21<\/span>\u00a0Interestingly, time-to-peak hyperaemia was negatively related to SHBG, indirect index of hyperinsulinaemia and hyperandrogenaemia. Another study, using the same methodology, confirmed a shorter duration of reactive hyperaemia in the PCOS group, and a significant positive correlation between the duration of reactive hyperaemia and dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate (DHEAS) levels in the PCOS group was reported, a finding that may support the cardioprotective effect of this androgen.25<\/span><\/p>\n Young women with PCOS have shown impaired endothelial-dependent dilatation as assessed by blood flow in the microvasculature of the forearm by the water displacement method during insulin infusion into the forearm in insulin-resistant PCOS, whereas insulin-sensitive women with PCOS responded similarly to controls.14<\/span> On the other hand, vascular function estimated by VOP assessing forearm vasodilatation in response to both endothelium-dependent (acetylcholine\/bradykinin) and endothelium-independent (nitroprusside\/verapamil) dilatators was not impaired in women with PCOS, compared with age- and weight-matched controls.29<\/span> Overall, forearm vasodilatation to all four drugs was reduced (<50%) in obese women with PCOS, compared with lean women with PCOS, but no significant difference in vascular function was detected between women with PCOS, compared with corresponding controls. On the other hand, obese women with PCOS exhibited markedly reduced vascular smooth muscle function compared with lean subjects with PCOS.29<\/span> Similarly, using a VOP technique to assess reactive hyperaemia of forearm microcirculation showed no evidence of endothelial dysfunction in obese women with PCOS compared with age- and weight-matched controls with a similar metabolic and inflammatory profile.13<\/span><\/p>\n Microvascular function has also been studied by wire myography, measuring the concentration response curve to norepinephrine before and after incubation with insulin in young women with PCOS and controls with similar cardiovascular risk factors.8<\/span>\u00a0A functional defect in the vascular action of insulin\u00a0ex vivo\u00a0<\/span>in patients with PCOS was demonstrated, suggesting a deleterious effect of insulin resistance at a vascular level in women without overt CVD. The defect in resistance arterioles was suggested to be specific to the action of insulin, since constriction to norepinephrine and relaxation to acetylcholine did not differ between women with PCOS and controls. In healthy subjects, insulin caused a dose-related attenuation of norepinephrine action; maximal response and sensitivity to norepinephrine decreased after exposure to physiological and supraphysiological concentrations of insulin. However, no response was observed at physiological doses in the vessels of women with PCOS, whereas at supraphysiological doses, sensitivity, but not maximum response, was altered, suggesting an abnormal resistance artery response to insulin, even in the absence of any other risk factor.8<\/span><\/p>\n In another study, microvascular function was assessed by forearm skin microvascular erythrocyte flux responses to cumulative iontophoretic doses of 1% (w\/v) acetylcholine and 1% (w\/v) sodium nitroprusside, using laser Doppler imaging in women with PCOS and age-matched controls.17<\/span>\u00a0Basal microvascular perfusion was comparable in PCOS and controls, but the increase in skin microvascular perfusion in response to acetylcholine was blunted and peak acetylcholine-induced erythrocyte flux was reduced in women with PCOS compared with controls. Twenty per cent of acetylcholine response was attributed on insulin and BMI, while altered acetylcholine response was influenced by BMI and androgens levels. No difference in the response to nitrates was documented, implying an exclusively endothelial microvascular dysfunction.<\/p>\n Summarizing, based on different approaches of microcirculation assessment, it could be concluded that women with PCOS have impaired function in micro-vessels, but there are limited data regarding the association of this alteration with the hormonal and metabolic disturbances of the syndrome. On the other hand, among the four studies that have used plethysmography to assess microvasculature,7,13,21,25 <\/span>only one (11 patients with PCOS versus 12 controls) did not show impairment in women with PCOS,13<\/span> whilst the other three studies (66 patients with PCOS versus 53 controls) showed a clear difference7,13,21,25<\/span>\u00a0(Table 1<\/span>).3\u2013104<\/span>\u00a0In another two studies performed by the same group where reactive hyperaemia was assessed by an alternative technique, no difference was documented.75,91<\/span><\/p>\n Another important manifestation to consider as a result of microvascular endothelial dysfunction would be pre-eclampsia, particularly the late-onset, where endothelial involvement has a key role in the pathogenesis.192<\/span>\u00a0In fact, a recent prospective cohort study showed that pre-eclampsia, gestational diabetes and lower birth weight among newborns were significantly higher in the women with PCOS compared with healthy controls, identifying higher BMI and hyperandrogenaemia as the strongest predicting factors.193<\/span><\/p>\n Intima-media thickness and polycystic ovary syndrome<\/strong><\/p>\n Intima-media thickness (IMT) is a morphological marker of vascular injury.194<\/span>\u00a0An increase in carotid artery IMT has been observed in women with PCOS, and especially in middle-aged women.3,5<\/span>\u00a0In 16 premenopausal women, aged >40 years old with a history of PCOS, carotid IMT was increased, compared with a control group of similar age.3<\/span>\u00a0Nevertheless, this difference was observed between patients and controls, up to the age of 45 and not in younger groups. PCOS was found to represent the unique prognostic factor of variable IMT in multiple regression analyses, while, after correction for age and BMI, the correlations of PCOS changed slightly, implying that part of the observed relation between PCOS and IMT is likely due to central obesity and hyperinsulinaemia.3<\/span>\u00a0In a study of 125 women with PCOS and 142 controls, there was a significantly higher prevalence of carotid index of atheromatic plaques in women with PCOS (7.2% versus 0.7%) compared with controls.5<\/span>\u00a0The difference in carotid IMT between women with PCOS and controls was detected in women aged \u226545 years, compared with women aged 30\u201344 years. Since CVD is characterized by long-term subclinical latency, metabolic disturbances are becoming overt at middle-age only. PCOS and aging appear to interact, resulting in deleterious changes to the carotid arterial wall, since differences in lipids levels between women with PCOS and controls are blunted approaching the menopausal period.194,195<\/span>\u00a0As expected, contradictory data have been published in younger women.9,18,23<\/span><\/p>\n Notably, a clinical study investigated the haemodynamic changes in the medial cerebral artery and the internal carotid artery in 28 young women with PCOS and polycystic ovaries (PCO) compared to 24 healthy control subjects.196<\/span>\u00a0Blood flow rate and pulsatility index were measured by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography, but no significant differences in haemodynamic parameters were detected between groups.196<\/span>\u00a0In another study, impaired carotid IMT in young women of normal weight who were eulipidaemic, normotensive and had PCOS, suggested a premature structural vascular injury.10<\/span>\u00a0In a large-population study, 75 women with PCOS were compared with a group of 55 healthy women of similar age, BMI, smoking habits, familial history for CVD, blood pressure and glucose, and higher IMT values were evidenced in the PCOS group.19<\/span>\u00a0In PCOS, IMT was positively correlated with age and BMI and negatively with low HDL-C, DHEAS and androstenedione plasma levels, indicating that adrenal androgens and particularly DHEAS can partially compensate the unfavourable consequence of dyslipidaemia and insulin resistance. This outcome has been supported in other published work, which has focused on the effect on adrenal sex steroids on the metabolic profile of women with PCOS, but did not satisfy the criteria to be included in this review.197,198<\/span>\u00a0In fact, in a recent study a positive correlation of 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OH-Pg) with HDL-C and HOMA-S was found, which suggests that patients with hyperandrogenaemic PCOS with high levels of 17-OH-Pg could have a certain protection against CVD.199<\/span>\u00a0Finally, in 43 young women with PCOS and 43 age-matched controls, common carotid IMT was higher in women with PCOS compared with controls.20<\/span><\/p>\n Overall, we reviewed 71 studies that assessed IMT; 44 (62%) of them, including 2,761 patients with PCOS and 2,218 control subjects, showed impairment in PCOS, as opposed to 27 studies (including 1,571 patients with PCOS and 1,286 subjects) that did not show any difference between the groups (Table 1<\/span>);3\u2013104<\/span>\u00a0however, the mixture of population characteristics may have had a major impact on statistics.<\/p>\n Other cardiovascular risk factors<\/strong><\/p>\n In a study evaluating serum aldosterone concentration and cardiovascular risk in women with PCOS, a direct correlation between plasma aldosterone, IMT and mean BP was found. Cardiac function and polycystic ovary syndrome<\/strong><\/p>\n Other morphological and functional cardiovascular parameters have also been studied in PCOS. An increased prevalence of coronary artery calcium (a marker of coronary atherosclerosis) was found when assessed by non-invasive electron beam computed tomography (EBCT) in 36 women with PCOS, compared with 71 controls of a similar age and BMI.201<\/span>\u00a0Similarly, a higher prevalence of coronary artery calcium (45.9% versus 30.6%) and aortic arterial calcification (68.9% versus 55.3%), measured by EBCT, was documented in women with PCOS compared with controls in a prospective study, whereby women were screened in 1993\u20131994 and re-evaluated in 2001\u20132002.11<\/span>\u00a0After adjustment for age and BMI, PCOS was found to be a significant predictor of coronary artery calcium, but not aortic arterial calcification. In addition, an increased risk of metabolic syndrome was reported in women with PCOS.11<\/span><\/p>\n In 60 women (20 with PCOS, 20 with PCO and 20 healthy controls), compliance and stiffness indices were assessed in the common and internal carotid arteries using ultrasonographic methods. An impairment was reported in women with PCOS, compared with controls.202<\/span>\u00a0Furthermore, macrovascular function at the brachial artery (but not at the aorta), as well as microvascular function, have been found to be impaired, suggesting increased vascular stiffness and a functional defect in the vascular action of insulin\u00a0ex vivo<\/span>\u00a0in patients with PCOS.17<\/span>\u00a0This has been confirmed by other studies evaluating arterial stiffness, where insulin resistance was an independent prognostic factor of pulse wave velocity and arterial stiffness in women with PCOS.18<\/span>\u00a0Endothelial function has also been assessed using peripheral arterial tonometry methodology, namely a post-ischaemia reactive hyperaemia technique that determines endothelial function as the ratio between the arterial pulse wave amplitude following a 5-minute arterial occlusion in the forearm to the pre-occlusion value, in normal-weight young women with PCOS compared with a control group with similar BMI.30 <\/span>However, taken together, these parameters (arterial stiffness, augmentation index, resistance indices, aortic wave reflections) showed contradictory results (Table 1<\/span><\/em>).3\u2013104<\/span><\/p>\n Cardiac function parameters have been also investigated in PCOS. In 26 lean young women with PCOS (mean age 22.8 \u00b1 0.9 years; mean BMI 23.0 \u00b1 0.8) and 11 healthy slightly older women with similar BMI (mean age 26.3 \u00b1 1.7 years; mean BMI 22.9 \u00b1 0.9), parameters of cardiac output were estimated by ultrasonographic method; impaired parameters of systolic function, as well as their negative association with fasting insulin, were observed in the PCOS group without impairment of diastolic function.179<\/span>\u00a0In another study, several diastolic and systolic parameters were impaired in women with PCOS; however, women with PCOS had higher total cholesterol and LDL-C levels compared with controls.180<\/span>\u00a0In a<\/a>nother study, 30 women with PCOS differed in diastolic cardiac parameters compared with 30 older healthy women, and hyperinsulinaemia and lipidaemic load were higher in the PCOS group.181<\/span>\u00a0Another study found that ultrasonographic cardiac parameters were evaluated and women with PCOS had higher left atrium size and left ventricular mass index, lower left ventricular ejection fraction and early-to-late mitral flow velocity ratio than controls.203<\/span>\u00a0When patients and controls were grouped according to weight into normal weight, overweight and obese groups, differences in the metabolic profile and cardiac findings persisted, but a progressive impairment of metabolic profile and echocardiographic pattern was seen in patients with normal weight compared with those with obesity. Young women with PCOS had a significantly increased cardiac size compared with controls, and other structural, systolic and diastolic function cardiac parameters were altered. Notably, most cardiac abnormalities persisted even in young patients with normal weight, suggesting that the pathogenesis of cardiac abnormalities in PCOS is not only dependent on BMI, but also to insulin resistance indices.203<\/span><\/p>\n Finally, autonomic innervation of the heart, evaluated non-invasively with power spectrum analysis of heart rate variability from electrocardiographic recordings, can be affected in women with PCOS with increased sympathetic and decreased parasympathetic components of heart rate variability.204<\/span><\/p>\n Biochemical studies for endothelial function assessment in polycystic ovary syndrome<\/p>\n Endothelial dysfunction can also be assessed biochemically by ET-1 plasma levels measurements. In 2001, Diamanti-Kandarakis et al. showed that ET-1 plasma levels are increased in women with PCOS.6<\/span>\u00a0ET-1 plasma levels were positively related to androgen levels and negatively to insulin sensitivity, assessed by HEC (the gold standard assessment of insulin sensitivity), suggesting insulin resistance and hyperinsulinaemia implication in altered endothelial function. These results were later confirmed.10,15<\/span> Overall, we reviewed seven studies that assessed ET-1 levels, five (71%) of which included 109 patients with PCOS and 83 controls, and showed increased ET-1 levels in PCOS, whereas two studies (including 59 women with PCOS and 49 controls) did not show any difference between the groups (Table 1<\/span>).3\u2013104<\/span><\/p>\n Markers of low-grade inflammation and certain components of the haemostatic system have been also shown to predict atherosclerotic risk in insulin-resistance states such as metabolic syndrome and T2DM.205,206<\/span>\u00a0Recent advances in basic science have demonstrated a fundamental role for inflammation in mediating all stages of this disease, from initiation through progression of atherosclerosis. The current notion that inflammation and immune response contribute to atherogenesis has garnered increased interest.207<\/span>\u00a0Evidence of low-grade chronic inflammation in PCOS is indicated by the presence of several elevated markers such as CRP levels,12,177,208,209<\/span>\u00a0inflammatory cytokines,210\u2013212<\/span>\u00a0increased leukocyte count213<\/span>\u00a0and adhesion molecules177<\/span>\u00a0(Table 1<\/span>).3\u2013104<\/span><\/p>\n A number of studies in humans have assessed the relationship between endothelial function and markers of inflammation, but the results have been variable and sometimes conflicting regarding the relationship between CRP and brachial artery FMD, or between CRP and coronary endothelial dysfunction. In sum, we reviewed 34 studies that assessed CRP levels; 21 (62%) of them (including 1,589 patients with PCOS and 1,209 control subjects) showed increased CRP levels in PCOS, as opposed to 13 studies (including 591 PCOS and 473 control subjects) that did not show any difference between the groups (Table 1<\/span>).3\u2013104<\/span><\/p>\n
\nof PCOS, contribute to the presence of metabolic syndrome with characteristic linkage to atheroma development and to overt risk for CVD.162<\/span>\u00a0In addition, hypertension represents an uncommon and inconsistent finding in young women with PCOS, but its prevalence increases to 40% in the perimenopausal period.163\u2013166<\/span> However, the epidemiological evidence of CVD events in relation to PCOS has not been confirmed.167<\/span><\/p>\n
\ninsulin-mediated response of leg blood flow was found in the PCOS group, along with resistance to the vasodilating action of insulin, compared with the control group.7<\/span>\u00a0This reduction was in response to intrafemoral injection of methacholine chloride. Insulin resistance was suggested to contribute to endothelial dysfunction, whereas BMI and androgens predicted endothelial dysfunction.7<\/span><\/p>\n
\nInsulin resistance in 50 women with PCOS was positively related to serum aldosterone levels, compared with 50 age- and BMI-matched healthy controls.24<\/span>\u00a0The activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system has an impact on endothelial dysfunction and is involved in the process of atherogenesis in women with PCOS, so spironolactone treatment might reverse endothelial dysfunction in women with PCOS.200<\/span><\/p>\n