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Abstract
Highlights
►
Bilateral oophorectomy in young women is strongly associated with an
increase in body fatness, a risk factor for chronic diseases.
► The strongest association between oophorectomy and body fat was observed among women who never used hormone therapy.
► Measuring body fat in addition to body mass index can provide a more comprehensive assessment of adiposity in these women.
► The strongest association between oophorectomy and body fat was observed among women who never used hormone therapy.
► Measuring body fat in addition to body mass index can provide a more comprehensive assessment of adiposity in these women.
Objective
Preclinical
studies suggest that abrupt hormone deprivation caused by oophorectomy,
leads to obesity and its metabolic sequelae. The purpose of the current
study was to examine the association between oophorectomy and body
fatness in a nationally representative sample of women.
Methods
The
association between prior oophorectomy and nine adiposity measures was
examined using data from the Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III,1988-1994). The analytic population
included cancer-free women age 40 or older (N = 3549) who underwent
standardized body measurements and reported on whether or not they had a
bilateral oophorectomy. Multivariate linear and polytomous logistic
regression were used to evaluate the association of oophorectomy with
multiple measures of adiposity.
Results
Mean
percent body fat, skinfold thickness, waist circumference and body mass
index were significantly higher in women with oophorectomy before age
40 compared to those with intact ovaries, but no difference was observed
in women with oophorectomy at an older age. Women who underwent an
early oophorectomy were nearly three times more likely than women with
intact ovaries to have percent body fat in the highest tertile compared
to the lowest tertile (OR = 2.82, 95% CI 1.39-5.75). Excluding hormone
therapy (HT) users yielded stronger associations.
Conclusion
Bilateral
oophorectomy in young women is strongly associated with an increase in
percent body fat, a well-established risk factor for cancer and other
chronic diseases. Measuring body fat in addition to BMI may provide a
more comprehensive assessment of adiposity in these women.
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