Prevalence and genetic etiology of poly-cystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) in Mauritania
Marieme Elwafi, Abdi Ahmed, Omar Akhouayri, Ahmed Zein, Hamma Abdelkader, Roughaya Selman, Ahmed Houmeida

TL;DR
This study examines the prevalence of PCOS in Mauritania and identifies genetic variants possibly linked to the condition.
Contribution
The study reports on the prevalence of PCOS in Mauritania and explores specific gene polymorphisms associated with the disorder.
Findings
The prevalence of PCOS was found to be 7.8% in the studied cohort.
LHCGR rs2293275 and ESR1 rs2234693 polymorphisms were associated with PCOS.
The rs104893836 polymorphism was not found in any PCOS cases tested.
Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine and metabolic disorder characterized by polycystic ovaries, oligoanovulation, hyperandrogenism and infertility. The exact specific causes of this disease have not yet been identified, but there is evidence of significant genetic involvement. The present study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of PCOS and explore its gene polymorphisms in the Mauritanian population. Files of 2,100 women patients attending two gynaecologic clinics of Nouakchott were retrospectively analysed to identify PCOS patients based on the 2003 Rotterdam Criterion. A genetic study used Sanger sequencing to search for six known SNPs in LHCGR (rs2293275), FSHR (rs6166), ESR1 (rs2234693), GnRHR (rs104893836), miR-126 (rs4636297), and miR-499 (rs3746444) among 8 familial PCOS cases and 3 sporadic patients. A more extended search was then carried out exclusively for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOvarian function and disorders · Ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment · Reproductive Biology and Fertility
