PCOS is a clinical heterogeneous entity of female androgen excess diagnosed by exclusion of other disorders responsible for androgen excess. The concept of secondary PCOS implies that there is a primary well-defined cause leading to the PCOS phenotype with underlying androgen overproduction, regardless of the origin. In these cases, we presume the term of 'secondary PCOS' could be used. In all these conditions, the potential complete recovery of the hyperandrogenemic state as well as the remission of the PCOS phenotype should follow the removal of the cause. If accepted, these concepts could help clinicians to perform in-depth investigations of the potential factors or disorders responsible for the development of these specific forms of secondary PCOS. Additionally, this could contribute to develop further research on factors and mechanisms involved in the development of the classic and the nonclassic PCOS phenotypes.
Invited author's profileRenato Pasquali is full professor of Endocrinology & Metabolism and Director of the division of Endocrinology of the S.Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna, Italy. He also heads the School of Specialization in Endocrinology and Metabolism, University Alma Mater Studiorum of Bologna, Italy. He is a member of numerous national and international scientific societies and serves on the editorial boards of international journals. His scientific interests relate to (i) the pathophysiology and treatment of the polycystic ovary syndrome; (ii) the endocrinology of obesity (sex hormones, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and the endocannabinoid system).