Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0032p1021 | Thyroid (non-cancer) | ECE2013

Should subclinical hypothyroidism diagnosed during pregnancy be treated with long-term L-thyroxine?

Vaidya Bijay , Knight Bea , Hill Anita , Hattersley Andrew , Shields Beverley

Background: Subclinical hypothyroidism is common in pregnancy affecting about 5% of all pregnant women, and is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. There is a general consensus that subclinical hypothyroidism detected during pregnancy should be treated with L-thyroxine (Stagnaro-green et al. 2011, DeGroot et al. 2012). However, it is unclear whether the treatment should be limited only during the pregnancy or continued long-term. Therefo...

ea0050oc3.1 | Obesity, Diabetes Thyroid | SFEBES2017

Perchlorate exposure affects thyroid function in third trimester pregnant women from South-West England

Knight Bridget , Shields Beverley , Pearce Elizabeth , Braverman Lewis , He Xuemei , Sturley Rachel , Vaidya Bijay

Introduction: Iodine is important for thyroid hormone synthesis, and iodine deficiency in pregnancy may impair foetal neurological development. Perchlorate, found in some foods and everyday chemicals (e.g. fertilisers) and thiocyanate, which is found in cigarette smoke, decrease the transport of iodine from the circulation to the thyroid cells by inhibiting the sodium-iodide symporter. Environmental exposure to these substances during pregnancy may result in reduced thyroid ho...

ea0050oc3.1 | Obesity, Diabetes Thyroid | SFEBES2017

Perchlorate exposure affects thyroid function in third trimester pregnant women from South-West England

Knight Bridget , Shields Beverley , Pearce Elizabeth , Braverman Lewis , He Xuemei , Sturley Rachel , Vaidya Bijay

Introduction: Iodine is important for thyroid hormone synthesis, and iodine deficiency in pregnancy may impair foetal neurological development. Perchlorate, found in some foods and everyday chemicals (e.g. fertilisers) and thiocyanate, which is found in cigarette smoke, decrease the transport of iodine from the circulation to the thyroid cells by inhibiting the sodium-iodide symporter. Environmental exposure to these substances during pregnancy may result in reduced thyroid ho...

ea0063oc11.1 | Diabetes 2 | ECE2019

Hormonal factors and type 2 diabetes risk in women: a 22 year follow-up study on more than 83 000 women from the E3N cohort study

Tatulashvili Sopio , Gusto Gaelle , Balkau Beverley , Cosson Emmanuel , Bonnet Fabrice , Bihan Helene , Fagherazzi Guy

Background: Early screening and the treatment of glucose metabolism disorders could lower the risk of further complications. For this purpose it is important to identify the risk factors of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The aim of this study was to determine the association between various hormonal factors and the risk of incident type 2 diabetes in the large prospective female E3N cohort study.Material and methods: The study included 83,799 French wo...

ea0044p40 | Adrenal and Steroids | SFEBES2016

Steroid metabolomics for diagnosis of inborn steroidogenic disorders – bridging the gap between clinician and scientist through computational approaches

Baranowski Elizabeth , Bunte Kerstin , Shackleton Cedric , Taylor Angela , Hughes Beverley , Biehl Michael , Tino Peter , Guran Tulay , Arlt Wiebke

Background: The urinary steroid metabolome is considered the fingerprint of adrenal gland function. Novel methods using mass spectrometry profiling have seen the advent of a new era for metabolomics with powerful implications for both diagnostics and discovery. Its interpretation is difficult and performed by few specialists with the expertise to do so. This makes it a relatively inaccessible tool for the majority of Clinical Endocrinologists.Objective: ...

ea0041ep728 | Neuroendocrinology | ECE2016

Women with idiopathic intracranial hypertension have a distinct andro-metabolic signature compared to polycystic ovary syndrome and simple obesity

Kempegowda Punith , O'Reilly Michael , Hornby Catherine , Botfield Hannah , Taylor Angela , Hughes Beverley , Tomlinson Jeremy , Arlt Wiebke , Sinclair Alexandra

Context: Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is characterised by elevated intracranial pressure and occurs predominantly in obese premenopausal women. Signs and symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) often coexist in IIH. Here we compared the androgenic and metabolic phenotypes in IIH, PCOS and simple obesity.Patients and Methods: We studied 25 patients with IIH (mean age 34.4±9.2 years; mean BMI 37.8±5.2 kg/m2), in comp...

ea0038oc1.4 | Early Career Oral Communications | SFEBES2015

Adipose tissue-specific androgen generation fuels an adverse metabolic phenotype in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome

O'Reilly Michael , Kempegowda Punith , Gathercole Laura , Bujalska Iwona , Taylor Angela , Hughes Beverley , Dunn Warwick , Semple Robert , Tomlinson Jeremy , Arlt Wiebke

Insulin resistance and androgen excess are the cardinal features of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Severity of hyperandrogenism and metabolic dysfunction in PCOS are closely correlated, but underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Aldoketoreductase type 1C3 (AKR1C3) is a key source of adipose androgen generation, activating androstenedione to testosterone (T). We postulated that AKR1C3 plays a critical role linking androgen metabolism and metabolic ...

ea0038p193 | Obesity, diabetes, metabolism and cardiovascular | SFEBES2015

Women with idiopathic intracranial hypertension have a distinct andro-metabolic signature compared to polycystic ovary syndrome and simple obesity

O'Reilly Michael , Kempegowda Punith , Botfield Hannah , Ali Fizzah , Taylor Angela , Hughes Beverley , Tomlinson Jeremy , Arlt Wiebke , Sinclair Alex

Context: Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is characterised by elevated intracranial pressure and occurs predominantly in obese premenopausal women. Signs and symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) often coexist in IIH. Here we compared the androgenic and metabolic phenotypes in IIH, PCOS and simple obesity.Patients and methods: We studied 25 patients with IIH (mean age 34.4±9.2 years; mean BMI 37.8±5.2 kg/m2), in comp...

ea0025p166 | Diabetes, metabolism and cardiovascular | SFEBES2011

Lack of beneficial metabolic profile in liver-specific 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD1) knockout mice

Lavery Gareth , Rabbitt Elizabeth , Zielinszka Agnieszka , Huges Beverley , Semjonous Nina , Saqib Khalid , Morgan Stuart , Gathercole Laura , Walker Elizabeth , Stewart Paul

In humans glucocorticoid (GC) excess can promote hepatic glucose and triglyceride production contributing to obesity, fatty liver and diabetes. 11β-HSD1 activates GCs (11-DHC to corticosterone in mice), thereby increasing tissue concentrations. The liver has the highest 11β-HSD1 activity, and its inhibition has emerged as a therapeutic option. To investigate this we generated 11β-HSD1 liver-specific knockouts (HSD1LKO) and examined GC metabolism and responses to...

ea0049oc1.3 | Adrenal-Basic & Clinical | ECE2017

Steroid metabolomics for accurate and rapid diagnosis of inborn steroidogenic disorders

Baranowski Elizabeth , Bunte Kerstin , Shackleton Cedric H L , Taylor Angela E , Hughes Beverley A , Biehl Michael , Tino Peter , Guran Tulay , Arlt Wiebke

Background: Urinary steroid metabolite profiling is an accurate reflection of adrenal and gonadal steroid output and metabolism in peripheral target cells of steroid action. Measurement of steroid metabolite excretion by gas chromatography-–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) is considered reference standard for biochemical diagnosis of steroidogenic disorders. However, performance of GC–MS analysis and interpretation of the resulting data requires significant expertise a...