Lifestyle modification interventions, such as eating healthy and engaging in physical activity, confer benefits for ovarian dysmorphology, hyperandrogenism and menstrual irregularity in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a recent study reports.
Sixty-one PCOS patients were randomly assigned to 16-week interventions that involved a pulse‐based diet (lentils, beans, split peas and chickpeas; n=30) or Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes diet (TLC; n=31) without energy restriction. All participants performed aerobic exercise (minimum of 5 days/week; 45 minutes/day) and received health counselling monthly.
Both groups demonstrated significant improvements over time in the following outcomes: follicle numbers per ovary (FNPO; 2–9 mm; mean change, −10), ovarian volume (OV; mean change, −2.7 mL), free androgen index (FAI; mean change, −3) and menstrual cycle length (mean change, −13 days; p<0.01 for all), without group‐by‐time interactions (p≥0.13).
Overall attrition rate was 33.7 percent and did not significantly differ between the two groups (p=0.94). Adherence to diet intervention was inversely associated with changes in FNPO (r, −0.54), OV (r, −0.35) and FAI (r, −0.29) in pooled groups (p≤0.04).
The improvements observed in OV, FNPO, FAI and menstrual cycles in both groups persisted at month 6 postintervention. However, reduced FNPO and FAI at 16 weeks tended to revert to baseline levels at month 12 postintervention in both groups (p≤0.05).
The present data underscore a need for longitudinal surveillance for sustainable adherence to newly adopted healthy lifestyle behaviours and reproductive health in PCOS, the researchers said.