Investigation of serum agouti-related peptide levels in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
Gülsüm Kırılmaz, İbrahim Kale

TL;DR
This study found no significant difference in agouti-related peptide levels between women with polycystic ovary syndrome and healthy controls.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence that agouti-related peptide levels are not significantly altered in polycystic ovary syndrome patients.
Findings
Serum agouti-related peptide levels were similar between polycystic ovary syndrome and control groups.
Levels remained comparable across subgroups stratified by BMI and polycystic ovary syndrome phenotype.
Results suggest agouti-related peptide is unlikely to play a significant role in polycystic ovary syndrome pathophysiology.
Abstract
Agouti-related peptide, secreted by the terminals of agouti-related peptide neurons in the hypothalamus and released into the systemic circulation, has been implicated in regulating food intake, obesity, and the development of insulin resistance. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate serum agouti-related peptide levels in women with polycystic ovary syndrome. This cross-sectional, case–control study included 88 women with polycystic ovary syndrome and 88 age- and body mass index-matched controls. Serum agouti-related peptide levels were quantified using commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits. First, serum agouti-related peptide levels were compared between the control and polycystic ovary syndrome groups, followed by comparisons between the subgroups. The median serum agouti-related peptide level was 331.1 ng/L in the polycystic ovary syndrome group and 362 ng/L…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRegulation of Appetite and Obesity · Hypothalamic control of reproductive hormones · Adipose Tissue and Metabolism
