Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Dilemmas in screening & criteria for diagnosis of adolescent PCO-Clinicians are clueless which criteria to follow.


How best to screen for  PCO in adolescent girls? Tips from Dr S K Pal including dilemmas::
Hyperandrogenic ovulatory dysfunction commonly called as Polycystic Ovary Syndrome or simply PCOS is the most common reason for which an adolescent girl is referred to sonology unit of a radiology department. Quite often such girls are referred by a gynaecologist colleague with the solo complaint of oligomenorrhea and on further appraisal some of them show symptoms and signs of hyperandrogenism e.g. acne, hyperseborrhoea, male-pattern hair growth and alopecia. Few such teenagers also exhibit central obesity (high waist circumference) but it is uncommon to come across such young girls with other evidences of metabolic syndrome e.g. hypertension, dyslipidemia and overt insulin resistance (IR though there is no unanimously accepted definition of the metabolic syndrome (MetS) in children and adolescents2,3 .Hyperinsulinaemia and associated metabolic defects may even predate the PCOS since it is most likely that the syndrome is genetic in nature4and many scientists now believe that adolescent PCOS is primary an adrenal hyperandrogenism rather than ovarian disease5

What is not known about adolescent PCOS? What are the grey areas in the syndrome of adolescent PCOS?   

The ever growing knowledge on different aspects of adult PCOS has perplexed many clinicians how best to suspect or diagnose the PCOS at an early stage of life but sadly there is as yet no well-defined, uniform set criteria for diagnosis of PCOS in adolescence and the various definitions used today are outcomes of consensus statements, namely the majority opinion, and not the robust and solid findings of clinical trial evidence. Whether androgen excess should be a sine qua non in PCOS diagnosis is still undecided 6 and  which of the usual four symptoms and signs (menstrual disorders, obesity,  androgen excess and altered ovarian morphology in sonography) is more relevant in the causation of cardiometabolic risks in later life is still unanswered. Likewise, there is no universally accepted set laboratory workup for this syndrome not to speak of a single test. Most importantly, though this syndrome is considered as an androgen excess disorder there is no universally accepted cut off value of for androgens for this syndrome. Further, to what extent   adolescent PCOS  suffering from  one phenotype change to another as one  grow up and how does this transition affect their long-lasting health status has not been evaluated in any country  neither the magnitude of the societal obstacles in screening all adolescents for PCOS and cost of such screening has been assessed.


While acknowledging all these knowledge gaps, this review will critically analyze the opinions expressed by different international organizations and experts in this field so as to define which teenagers should be leveled as PCOS keeping in mind that the definition of this syndrome will evolve over time to incorporate new research findings.    The author also likes to highlight that the association of this syndrome with morphological appearance and ultrasonographic features of ovaries are fading out  8,9,    8)Duijkers IJ, Klipping C. - Polycystic Ovaries as defined by the 2003 Rotterdam consensus criteria are found to be very common in young healthy women.  Gynaecol Endocinol 2010; 26:152-160.
  9)  Jhonstone EB,RosenMP,Neril R, Trevithick D, Sternfeld B, Murphy R, Addauan-Andersen C, McConnell D, Pera RR , Cedars MI.  The polycystic ovary post-rotterdam: a common, age-dependent finding in ovulatory women without metabolic significance. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2010; 95:4965-4972

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