Abstract

ObjectivePolycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), affecting more than every 10th woman of reproductive age, is associated with increased risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Most knowledge regarding longtime consequences concerning morbidity is based on women where ovarian wedge resection (WR) was used as a surgical treatment, a method not used today. The aim of this study was to compare women with PCOS who had and had not undergone WR, regarding risk factors for CVD. The hypothesis was that women who had undergone WR had a more severe PCOS phenotype, and that this cohort thus had more associated CVD risk factors compared with women diagnosed through non-invasive methods. Study designA cross-sectional study was performed. A PCOS cohort who underwent WR in the 1950–60 s (n = 27) were compared with a PCOS cohort diagnosed by NIH-criterions in the 1990s without WR (n = 32). Both cohorts were examined at perimenopausal age. ResultsNo differences were seen in prevalence of hypertension, obesity or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) between the women with PCOS with or without WR, respectively. The results were persistent irrespective of the lower mean BMI in the WR group, 26.4 vs. 30.7 kg/m2, p = 0.01. In the stratified group of overweight and obese, there was no difference in T2DM 27% vs 25% or hypertension 27% vs 25%, in WR and non-WR women with PCOS, respectively. The cohort diagnosed through WR had higher free androgen index (6.3 vs. 2.1, p < 0.01) and total testosterone (2.20 vs. 0.99 nmol/L, p < 0.01). ConclusionNo differences in CVD risk factors were found in perimenopausal women with PCOS with or without a previous WR, and irrespective of body weight. The results indicate that CVD morbidity and mortality from studies in women with PCOS who have undergone WR are generalizable to women with PCOS who have not undergone WR.

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