Objectives
This study investigated the discriminative value of serum telomerase levels in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and its relation to metabolic parameters.
Methods
Patients aged 16–23 years old who visited an adolescent outpatient clinic were included in the study. Our study consisted of 45 non-obese girls with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), while our control group consisted of 45 healthy girls with normal menstrual cycles and no signs of hyperandrogenism. During the early follicular phase, all individuals were analyzed for serum telomerase levels, blood cell count, biochemical parameters, basal hormone levels, lipid profile and homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) index.
Results
Serum telomerase levels in PCOS patients were considerably lower (80.0 ± 52.8 IU/mL) than in the controls (113.1 ± 54.9 IU/mL) (p=0.004). We observed that blood telomerase levels less than 108.6 distinguished PCOS group from healthy controls with a sensitivity of 73.33% and a specificity of 57.78%. Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, HOMA-IR index, Ferriman–Gallwey score and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate values were higher in the study group. Moreover, serum telomerase levels were inversely correlated with body mass index (r=−0.339, p=0.023) and triglycerides (r=−0.511, p=0.002) in this group. Telomerase levels were also considerably lower in patients with metabolic syndrome (p=0.005).
Conclusions
Serum telomerase activity is lower in PCOS patients than in healthy controls. Furthermore, decreased serum telomerase levels may correlate well with the metabolic complications of PCOS.
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