Abstract
Introduction: The aim of this study was to evaluate the correlation between biochemical hyperandrogenemia
and body mass index in patients with amenorrhea as the main clinical presenting symptom.
Methods: Among 136 patients presenting with secondary or primary amenorrhea, hyperandrogenemia
was found to be the hormonal cause of this specific type of irregular menses in 21
patients. A retrospective study was carried out to investigate the patients’ serum
androgen findings and body mass index. The ultrasound features of the ovaries were
also recorded.
Results: Twenty-one of the 136 patients presenting with the most severe form of menstrual
irregularity, amenorrhea - defined as an absence of menses for at least 6 months -
were found to have elevated serum androgen levels. The androgen profile included elevated
levels of total testosterone (TT), or dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), or calculated
free testosterone (cFT), or all three, with or without an elevated luteinizing hormone-follicle-stimulating
hormone (LH : FSH) ratio. Six patients with a body mass index > 26 kg/m2 all had elevated
cFT, while TT was only increased in three patients. All of the patients had low levels
of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG). Two patients had abnormal TT, cFT, and DHEAS
levels together with polycystic ovaries. Eleven patients with a body mass index (BMI)
≤26 kg/m2 were found to have all of the combinations of normal and abnormal androgens.
In general, cFT was significantly increased in patients with a BMI > 26 kg/m2 (P<0.001), while TT serum levels did not significantly differ between the two groups.
Conclusions: Amenorrhea is by definition the most severe form of menstrual disorder. Biochemical
hyperandrogenemia can be found in a subgroup of amenorrheic patients. However, none
of the biochemical findings of hyperandrogenemia correlated consistently with this
specific type of menstrual disorder. In the women studied, there appears to be a correlation
between elevated androgen levels and a BMI > 26 kg/m2. cFT appears to be a more appropriate
criterion for identifying hyperandrogenemia than TT in patients presenting with amenorrhea.
More information about this condition and studies including larger numbers of patients
are needed.
Key words
hyperandrogenemia - amenorrhea - BMI - testosterone - DHEAS
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Correspondence
Dr. S. Cupisti
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Erlangen University Hospital
Universitätsstrasse 21-23
D-91054 Erlangen
Germany
Phone: +49/9131/853 35 53
Fax: +49/9131/853 35 52
Email: Susanne.Cupisti@gyn.imed
Email: uni-erlangen.de