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OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial

Exercising women often fail to consume adequate energy intake relative to energy expenditure and are thus susceptible to menstrual disturbances and poor bone health secondary to energy deficiency. Ideal treatment plans are to increase energy intake to reverse energetic suppression. The purpose of th...

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Autores principales: De Souza, Mary Jane, Mallinson, Rebecca J, Southmayd, Emily A, Strock, Nicole C A, Koltun, Kristen J, Mallinson, Daniel J, Williams, Nancy I
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207964/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1946
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author De Souza, Mary Jane
Mallinson, Rebecca J
Southmayd, Emily A
Strock, Nicole C A
Koltun, Kristen J
Mallinson, Daniel J
Williams, Nancy I
author_facet De Souza, Mary Jane
Mallinson, Rebecca J
Southmayd, Emily A
Strock, Nicole C A
Koltun, Kristen J
Mallinson, Daniel J
Williams, Nancy I
author_sort De Souza, Mary Jane
collection PubMed
description Exercising women often fail to consume adequate energy intake relative to energy expenditure and are thus susceptible to menstrual disturbances and poor bone health secondary to energy deficiency. Ideal treatment plans are to increase energy intake to reverse energetic suppression. The purpose of this study was to determine if REFUEL, a 12-month randomized controlled trial (RCT) of increased energy intake, improves menstrual frequency and markers of energetic status in exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea. Young, exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea were randomized into two groups. The treatment group (Oligo/Amen+Cal, n=32) increased energy intake 20-40% above baseline energy needs and the Oligo/Amen Control group (n=30) maintained exercise and eating habits for the 12-month intervention. Menses was tracked throughout the intervention by menstrual calendars and daily urine samples, energetic status was assessed by body composition and total triiodothyronine (TT(3)) and leptin concentrations. Conditional recurrent events Cox Proportional Hazards model tested the effects of the intervention and multi-level modelling assessed relationships among variables. There was a significant group*time interaction for body mass, percent body fat, fat mass, and TT(3) concentrations (p<0.03), such that Oligo/Amen+Cal women gained more body and fat mass and had a greater increase in TT(3) during the study compared to Oligo/Amen Controls. Specifically, Oligo/Amen+Cal women (21.6 yrs, BMI: 20.2 kg/m(2)) increased energy intake by 353 kcal/d and gained 1.9 kg of body mass, corresponding to increased fat mass (1.2 kg) and leptin (64%). Oligo/Amen Controls (20.9 yrs, BMI: 21.3 kg/m(2)) had no change (-32 kcal/d) in energy intake (p<0.001 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal) and minimal change in body mass (0.8 kg; p=0.04 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal), fat mass (0.4 kg; p=0.08 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal), and leptin (21% increase, p=0.07 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal). Controlling for baseline BMI and menstrual status, the intervention increased the likelihood of experiencing menses (p<0.001) such that Oligo/Amen+Cal women were twice as likely (104% increase) to experience menses during the intervention compared to Oligo/Amen Controls. Further, the higher the BMI at baseline, the greater the likelihood of experiencing a menses such that for every kg/m(2) increase in BMI the likelihood of menses increased by 10%. Overall, a nutritional intervention designed to increase energy intake by a moderate amount in exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea successfully improved body mass and fat mass, concentrations of metabolic hormones, and the likelihood of experiencing menses compared to oligo/amenorrheic women who maintained exercise and eating habits. As such, treatment plans designed to increase energy intake can be successful in reversing energetic suppression and recovering menses.
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spelling pubmed-72079642020-05-13 OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial De Souza, Mary Jane Mallinson, Rebecca J Southmayd, Emily A Strock, Nicole C A Koltun, Kristen J Mallinson, Daniel J Williams, Nancy I J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology Exercising women often fail to consume adequate energy intake relative to energy expenditure and are thus susceptible to menstrual disturbances and poor bone health secondary to energy deficiency. Ideal treatment plans are to increase energy intake to reverse energetic suppression. The purpose of this study was to determine if REFUEL, a 12-month randomized controlled trial (RCT) of increased energy intake, improves menstrual frequency and markers of energetic status in exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea. Young, exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea were randomized into two groups. The treatment group (Oligo/Amen+Cal, n=32) increased energy intake 20-40% above baseline energy needs and the Oligo/Amen Control group (n=30) maintained exercise and eating habits for the 12-month intervention. Menses was tracked throughout the intervention by menstrual calendars and daily urine samples, energetic status was assessed by body composition and total triiodothyronine (TT(3)) and leptin concentrations. Conditional recurrent events Cox Proportional Hazards model tested the effects of the intervention and multi-level modelling assessed relationships among variables. There was a significant group*time interaction for body mass, percent body fat, fat mass, and TT(3) concentrations (p<0.03), such that Oligo/Amen+Cal women gained more body and fat mass and had a greater increase in TT(3) during the study compared to Oligo/Amen Controls. Specifically, Oligo/Amen+Cal women (21.6 yrs, BMI: 20.2 kg/m(2)) increased energy intake by 353 kcal/d and gained 1.9 kg of body mass, corresponding to increased fat mass (1.2 kg) and leptin (64%). Oligo/Amen Controls (20.9 yrs, BMI: 21.3 kg/m(2)) had no change (-32 kcal/d) in energy intake (p<0.001 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal) and minimal change in body mass (0.8 kg; p=0.04 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal), fat mass (0.4 kg; p=0.08 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal), and leptin (21% increase, p=0.07 vs. Oligo/Amen+Cal). Controlling for baseline BMI and menstrual status, the intervention increased the likelihood of experiencing menses (p<0.001) such that Oligo/Amen+Cal women were twice as likely (104% increase) to experience menses during the intervention compared to Oligo/Amen Controls. Further, the higher the BMI at baseline, the greater the likelihood of experiencing a menses such that for every kg/m(2) increase in BMI the likelihood of menses increased by 10%. Overall, a nutritional intervention designed to increase energy intake by a moderate amount in exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea successfully improved body mass and fat mass, concentrations of metabolic hormones, and the likelihood of experiencing menses compared to oligo/amenorrheic women who maintained exercise and eating habits. As such, treatment plans designed to increase energy intake can be successful in reversing energetic suppression and recovering menses. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207964/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1946 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Reproductive Endocrinology
De Souza, Mary Jane
Mallinson, Rebecca J
Southmayd, Emily A
Strock, Nicole C A
Koltun, Kristen J
Mallinson, Daniel J
Williams, Nancy I
OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial
title OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial
title_fullStr OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full_unstemmed OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial
title_short OR31-07 Increased Caloric Intake Improves Regularity of Menses and Is Associated with Increased TT(3) and Leptin in Exercising Women with Oligo/amenorrhea: The “REFUEL” Randomized Controlled Trial
title_sort or31-07 increased caloric intake improves regularity of menses and is associated with increased tt(3) and leptin in exercising women with oligo/amenorrhea: the “refuel” randomized controlled trial
topic Reproductive Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207964/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1946
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