Abstract

Premature ovarian failure is a common condition of uncertain aetiology in most cases, although autoimmunity is thought to play a role in a proportion of cases. The frequency of ovarian antibodies, which may be markers for an autoimmune aetiology in this condition, remains unclear. To define this further, we have examined the sera of 45 women with premature ovarian failure (five with iatrogenic ovarian failure, nine with an associated autoimmune disease, and 27 with idiopathic ovarian failure), as well as four women with infertility due to Turner's syndrome and 41 pre- and post-menopausal controls. Using two human ovarian antigen preparations, 24% and 60% of the ovarian failure patients reacted in an ELISA (P < 0.05 and P < 0.001 compared with controls), but frequent cross-reactivity was found with fallopian tube antigens. The apparent aetiology of ovarian failure did not correlate with the presence of ovarian antibodies. Using bovine ovary as an antigen, there was a significant overall increase in binding by the ovarian failure patients, but this was almost identical to binding in an ELISA with bovine fallopian tube. In contrast to a previous report, there was no significant increase of binding to soluble or Triton-extracted membrane fractions of bovine corpora lutea containing the LH/hCG receptor by the patients with ovarian failure. These results suggest that ovarian antibodies are common in premature ovarian failure, but their specificity and pathogenic role are questionable.

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