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  • Title: Serum inhibins A and B fall differentially as FSH rises in perimenopausal women.
    Author: Burger HG, Cahir N, Robertson DM, Groome NP, Dudley E, Green A, Dennerstein L.
    Journal: Clin Endocrinol (Oxf); 1998 Jun; 48(6):809-13. PubMed ID: 9713572.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Serum FSH levels rise with increasing age in normal women, particularly as they enter the menopausal transition and progress to the postmenopausal state. The contributions of decreasing levels of inhibin-A (INH-A) and inhibin-B (INH-B) to this rise are presently unclear, as there are no reports of dimeric INH levels in relation to menopausal status. The present study was undertaken in order to provide preliminary data on relationships amongst the dimeric inhibins, oestradiol (E2) and FSH in normal subjects of defined menopausal status. METHODS: Single serum samples were obtained between cycle days 3 and 8 in regularly cycling women, or at random in those with irregular cycles or amenorrhoea, in 110 women, aged 48-59 years, in the third year of a prospective longitudinal study of the menopausal transition, 'The Melbourne Women's Mid-Life Health Project'. Samples were assayed for FSH, E2, INH-A, INH-B and immunoreactive inhibin (IR-INH) and results were analysed following logarithmic transformation. Undetectable values were assigned the limit of sensitivity of the respective assays. The relationships between hormones were evaluated as a function of menopausal stage. The latter was assigned as Stage 1, premenopausal (no reported change in menstrual cycle pattern), Stage 2, early peri-menopausal (reported change in menstrual cycle frequency in the preceding year with a bleed in the preceding 3 months), Stage 3, late peri-menopausal (no menses in the preceding 3-11 months) and Stage 4, postmenopausal (no menses in the preceding 12 months). RESULTS: The hormone concentrations in premenopausal subjects (geometric means, FSH 13.5 IU/l, E2 306 pmol/l, IR-INH 217 U/l, INH-A 96 ng/l, and INH-B 48 ng/l) were used as reference points for the other stages of menopausal status. Early peri-menopausal subjects had significantly lower levels of IR-INH (147 U/l) and INH-B (13.5 ng/l) in the presence of a small, statistically nonsignificant rise in FSH (to 21.4 U/l) and no significant change in E2 or INH-A. In late peri-menopausal subjects, IR-INH fell to 76 U/l, INH-A fell to 4.2 ng/l, whilst INH-B was not significantly different at 14 ng/l. FSH had risen significantly to 72.21 U/l. Oestradiol also fell significantly to 89 pmol/l. In the postmenopausal subjects there were no further significant changes in the peptide hormones or FSH, but E2 fell further to 41 pmol/l. There was a significant (P < 0.05) inverse correlation between FSH and E2 (R = -0.78), FSH and IR-INH (R = -0.66), FSH and INH-A (R = -0.53), FSH and INH-B (R = -0.29) while IR-INH and either INH-A or INH-B were positively correlated (R = +0.57 and +0.35, respectively). The data are consistent with negative feedback roles for both dimeric inhibins and E2 as contributors to the regulation of FSH secretion as menopausal status changes. CONCLUSIONS: The major significant endocrine event in women in the early peri-menopausal phase of the menopausal transition is a substantial fall in the circulating levels of inhibin-B with no significant change in inhibin-A or oestradiol. Progression to late peri-menopausal status is accompanied by a marked fall in inhibin-A and oestradiol and a rise in FSH without further change in inhibin-B. Inhibin-B, a marker of follicle number, is a significant factor in the endocrinology of the menopausal transition.
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