Cargando…

Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration

Introduction: Maternal obesity is an independent risk factor for reduced reproductive fitness. Decreased secretion of FSH in women with obesity is well documented but poorly understood. Furthermore, obese women secrete less protein and steroid hormones from their ovaries. In mice, prior studies have...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Luu, Thanh Ha, Kuhn, Katherine, Bradford, Andrew P, Johnson, Rachel, Carlson, Nichole, Kumar, T Rajendra, Polotsky, Alex Joel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8089842/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1493
_version_ 1783687136495534080
author Luu, Thanh Ha
Kuhn, Katherine
Bradford, Andrew P
Johnson, Rachel
Carlson, Nichole
Kumar, T Rajendra
Polotsky, Alex Joel
author_facet Luu, Thanh Ha
Kuhn, Katherine
Bradford, Andrew P
Johnson, Rachel
Carlson, Nichole
Kumar, T Rajendra
Polotsky, Alex Joel
author_sort Luu, Thanh Ha
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Maternal obesity is an independent risk factor for reduced reproductive fitness. Decreased secretion of FSH in women with obesity is well documented but poorly understood. Furthermore, obese women secrete less protein and steroid hormones from their ovaries. In mice, prior studies have demonstrated that pulsatile release of FSH enhances ovarian function and fertility. Hypothesis: We hypothesize that insufficient FSH pulsatility, as seen in women with obesity, results in inadequate folliculogenesis and reduced ovarian steroid production. We attempt to correct pulsatile FSH secretion in obese women by administering exogenous FSH to compensate for the suppressed circulating ovarian hormones. Our primary outcome is the change in peak inhibin B between pre- and post-treatment. We present results from our interim analysis. Methods: Reproductive aged, regularly menstruating, normal weight (NW) (BMI 18.5-24.9) and obese (OB) (BMI >30) women were recruited for a 26hr study during the early follicular phase. Frequent blood sampling (q10min) for 10h was performed to obtain baseline hormone levels. At 10h, 3 mg of cetrorelix, a gonadotropin hormone antagonist, was given followed by a secondary dose (0.25mg) 6h later. At this time, hourly IV recombinant (r)FSH (30IU) was initiated and frequent blood sampling continued for 10h. LH, FSH, estradiol (E2) were measured by immunoassay (Advia Centaur XP, Siemens). Inhibin B was measured using an ELISA kit (Ansh labs). Differences between groups were modeled by linear regression, adjusted for age and cycle day (continuous). The relationship between change in peak inhibin B and change in peak E2 was estimated in a linear regression. Results: A total of 36 participants (19 NW and 17 OB) were included in our interim analysis. There were no differences in age, cycle day of study, race, and waist/hip ratio. Inhibin B and E2 rises following the intervention were statistically significant within each group. Peak Inhibin B and E2 levels following intervention were lower in obese women compared to normal weight (133.4 vs 202.5 pg/mL and 85.8 vs 126.4 pg/mL, respectively). The difference in pre and post peak inhibin B levels trended lower in the obese group (-40.1 (95%CI: -86.2, 6.1, p=0.087). No difference was seen in maximal E2 response. There was no relationship between inhibin B and E2 response [0.08 (95%CI -0.26, 0.42), p=0.634]. Conclusions: These early results suggest obese women may have a lower response to pulsatile rFSH as compared to normal weight counterparts even with intravenous administration. We speculate this may be due to decreased uptake of rFSH in obese patients or a sign of ovarian dysfunction in obese women. Additional subjects are recruited to detect these differences.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8089842
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80898422021-05-06 Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration Luu, Thanh Ha Kuhn, Katherine Bradford, Andrew P Johnson, Rachel Carlson, Nichole Kumar, T Rajendra Polotsky, Alex Joel J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology Introduction: Maternal obesity is an independent risk factor for reduced reproductive fitness. Decreased secretion of FSH in women with obesity is well documented but poorly understood. Furthermore, obese women secrete less protein and steroid hormones from their ovaries. In mice, prior studies have demonstrated that pulsatile release of FSH enhances ovarian function and fertility. Hypothesis: We hypothesize that insufficient FSH pulsatility, as seen in women with obesity, results in inadequate folliculogenesis and reduced ovarian steroid production. We attempt to correct pulsatile FSH secretion in obese women by administering exogenous FSH to compensate for the suppressed circulating ovarian hormones. Our primary outcome is the change in peak inhibin B between pre- and post-treatment. We present results from our interim analysis. Methods: Reproductive aged, regularly menstruating, normal weight (NW) (BMI 18.5-24.9) and obese (OB) (BMI >30) women were recruited for a 26hr study during the early follicular phase. Frequent blood sampling (q10min) for 10h was performed to obtain baseline hormone levels. At 10h, 3 mg of cetrorelix, a gonadotropin hormone antagonist, was given followed by a secondary dose (0.25mg) 6h later. At this time, hourly IV recombinant (r)FSH (30IU) was initiated and frequent blood sampling continued for 10h. LH, FSH, estradiol (E2) were measured by immunoassay (Advia Centaur XP, Siemens). Inhibin B was measured using an ELISA kit (Ansh labs). Differences between groups were modeled by linear regression, adjusted for age and cycle day (continuous). The relationship between change in peak inhibin B and change in peak E2 was estimated in a linear regression. Results: A total of 36 participants (19 NW and 17 OB) were included in our interim analysis. There were no differences in age, cycle day of study, race, and waist/hip ratio. Inhibin B and E2 rises following the intervention were statistically significant within each group. Peak Inhibin B and E2 levels following intervention were lower in obese women compared to normal weight (133.4 vs 202.5 pg/mL and 85.8 vs 126.4 pg/mL, respectively). The difference in pre and post peak inhibin B levels trended lower in the obese group (-40.1 (95%CI: -86.2, 6.1, p=0.087). No difference was seen in maximal E2 response. There was no relationship between inhibin B and E2 response [0.08 (95%CI -0.26, 0.42), p=0.634]. Conclusions: These early results suggest obese women may have a lower response to pulsatile rFSH as compared to normal weight counterparts even with intravenous administration. We speculate this may be due to decreased uptake of rFSH in obese patients or a sign of ovarian dysfunction in obese women. Additional subjects are recruited to detect these differences. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8089842/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1493 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://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/ (https://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
Luu, Thanh Ha
Kuhn, Katherine
Bradford, Andrew P
Johnson, Rachel
Carlson, Nichole
Kumar, T Rajendra
Polotsky, Alex Joel
Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration
title Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration
title_full Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration
title_fullStr Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration
title_full_unstemmed Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration
title_short Obese Women Exhibit Reduced Inhibin B and Estradiol SecretionFollowing Pulsatile Intravenous FSH Administration
title_sort obese women exhibit reduced inhibin b and estradiol secretionfollowing pulsatile intravenous fsh administration
topic Reproductive Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8089842/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1493
work_keys_str_mv AT luuthanhha obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration
AT kuhnkatherine obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration
AT bradfordandrewp obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration
AT johnsonrachel obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration
AT carlsonnichole obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration
AT kumartrajendra obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration
AT polotskyalexjoel obesewomenexhibitreducedinhibinbandestradiolsecretionfollowingpulsatileintravenousfshadministration