Sensitization to Insulin in Adolescent Girls to Normalize Hirsutism, Hyperandrogenism, Oligomenorrhea, Dyslipidemia, and Hyperinsulinism after Precocious Pubarche1

Abstract
Precocious pubarche in girls is often preceded by low weight at birth and followed by hirsutism, ovarian hyperandrogenism, and oligomenorrhea in adolescence, the latter usually being accompanied by dyslipidemia and hyperinsulinism, which are, in turn, two major risk factors for cardiovascular disease in later life. We hypothesized that insulin resistance may be a key pathogenetic factor in this sequence. We tested the hypothesis by assessing the effects of an insulin-sensitizing agent, metformin, given at a daily dose of 1275 mg for 6 months to 10 nonobese adolescent girls (mean age, 16.8 yr; body mass index, 21.9 kg/m2; birth weight, 2.7 kg) with hirsutism, ovarian hyperandrogenism (diagnosis by GnRH agonist test), oligomenorrhea, dyslipidemia, and hyperinsulinemia after precocious pubarche. Before the metformin trial, longitudinal studies in these girls had shown that hyperinsulinism was present at prepubertal diagnosis of precocious pubarche, and that it increased markedly in late puberty or early postmenarche. Metformin treatment was well tolerated and was accompanied by a marked drop in hirsutism score, insulin response to oral glucose tolerance test, free androgen index, and baseline testosterone, androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone, and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate levels (all P < 0.01). During metformin treatment, the LH and 17-hydroxyprogesterone hyperresponses to GnRH agonist were attenuated (P < 0.01); serum triglyceride, total cholesterol, and low density lipoprotein cholesterol levels decreased; and high density lipoprotein cholesterol rose. All girls reported regular menses within 4 months. Withdrawal of metformin treatment was followed, within 3 months, by a consistent reversal toward pretreatment conditions. In conclusion, metformin treatment reduced hyperinsulinemia, hirsutism, and hyperandrogenism; attenuated the LH and 17-hydroxyprogesterone hyperresponses to GnRH agonist; improved the atherogenic lipid profile; and restored eumenorrhea in nonobese adolescent girls with a history of precocious pubarche. These observations corroborate the idea that insulin resistance may indeed be a prime factor underpinning the sequence from reduced fetal growth, through precocious pubarche, to adolescent endocrinopathies that are reminiscent of so-called polycystic ovary syndrome.

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