Objective: To perform an audit on the examination of hirsute patients and to establish a rational routine examination program in an outpatient endocrine clinic.
Design: Systematic, retrospective audit.
Setting: Academic tertiary-care medical center.
Patient(s): Three hundred forty women with hirsutism as the referral diagnosis.
Intervention(s): Hormone analyses and ACTH tests during cycle days 2-8, 2 hours of oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), and vaginal ultrasound.
Main outcome measure(s): End diagnosis, fasting, 30-, 60-, and 120-minute oral glucose-stimulated levels of insulin and capillary blood glucose.
Result(s): Two hundred one patients were diagnosed as having idiopathic hirsutism (IH) and 134 as having polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). End diagnosis: prolactinoma: n = 1, Cushing's syndrome: n = 1, androgen-producing ovarian tumor: n = 1, late-onset 21-hydroxylase defects: n = 2. During OGTT, 4.9% (13 of 263) had previously undiagnosed diabetes; no significant difference in diabetes prevalence was found between idiopathic hirsutism and PCOS. For 50.8%, fasting insulin values were in the upper quartile for a reference population.
Conclusion(s): Initial evaluation of hirsute patients with irregular menses should include serum (s)-17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone, s-prolactin, s-Testosterone (T), and s-sex hormone-binding globulin. Further evaluation is needed in patients with markedly elevated s-T or with clinical Cushing's syndrome. Hirsute patients have a high risk of diabetes, although this could be due to the high number of overweight patients among this population.