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Weight Cycling on Hyperandrogenemia and Insulin Resistance in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
Sponsor: Peking Union Medical College Hospital
Summary
This study prospectively includes PCOS patients with normal weight and overweight/obesity, closely follows up and intensively manages them, and observes the level and distribution of weight reduction achieved by patients after lifestyle intervention (high-protein diet for weight loss). Additionally, it aims to provide reference for setting weight loss targets for future PCOS patients by comparing the differences in clinical improvement among patients achieving different degrees of weight reduction (\<2% \[equivalent to no weight loss\], 2-5%, 5-10%, ≥10%) at different time points (3 months, 6 months) following dietary intervention. Furthermore, this study will compare the differences in reproductive and metabolic marker improvements between baseline PCOS patients experiencing weight rebound, those who successfully lost weight, and those who experienced weight rebound. This will help explore the impact of weight cycling on PCOS-related manifestations. Finally, at a genetic level, the study will analyze potential mechanisms underlying different outcome indicators by comparing differences in metagenomics, transcriptomics, and metabolomics among patient groups. Ancillary/Nested Sub-study (12-week Precision Nutrition Trial): Within the WHIP cohort, we will conduct a nested, prospective interventional sub-study to evaluate the efficacy of an insulin-resistance-phenotype-guided precision dietary prescription versus a standard guideline-based energy-restricted diet. Eligible participants are women with PCOS and insulin resistance enrolled in the cohort. The sub-study lasts 12 weeks with assessments at baseline and week 12. Primary endpoints include change in HOMA-IR and change in the core11 metabolic risk composite. Secondary endpoints include changes in gonadotropins (FSH, LH), sex steroid hormones (e.g., estradiol, progesterone), and patient-reported symptom scores.
Official title: The Effect and Mechanism Of Weight Cycling on Hyperandrogenemia And Insulin Resistance in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 45 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
425
Start Date
2024-08-13
Completion Date
2026-04-01
Last Updated
2025-12-03
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Adjusting dietary structure + exercise + behavioral intervention
Adjusting to a healthy diet involves consuming low GI and low-fat foods, avoiding sugary drinks, increasing dietary fiber intake, reducing saturated fat while increasing omega-3 unsaturated fat intake, and limiting trans fat consumption. A weight loss program includes a high-protein diet, exercise, and behavioral intervention with daily total energy needs calculated based on ideal body weight (kg) x 15-20 kcal/kg/d; developing a daily meal plan with regular protein supplementation; limiting salt intake to ≤5 g/d; ensuring adequate water consumption at 2-3L/d; aiming for a dietary fiber intake of 25-30g/d; recommending micronutrient supplementation as needed; maintaining daily aerobic exercise (40 minutes at 70-80% HRmax) along with resistance training (20 minutes); establishing an early bedtime before 11pm and an early wake-up time.
Precision dietary prescription
A 12-week precision diet program individualized to baseline insulin-resistance metabolic subphenotype, including personalized macronutrient targets, food-based meal plans, and dietitian-led counseling with regular follow-ups.
Standard guideline-based low-energy diet
A 12-week standardized low-energy diet based on national guideline recommendations for overweight/obesity, with the same counseling frequency as the precision-diet arm but without metabolic tailoring.
Locations (1)
Peking Union Medical College Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China