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News • Polycystic ovary syndrome

Study links PCOS and heart disease

Long-term study finds association between PCOS and heart disease across three Nordic countries, highlights importance of regular medical screenings.

Heart disease risk has been found to increase in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), even in those with normal weight, according to research presented at the 28th European Congress of Endocrinology in Prague. This long-term study, whose results were recently published in the European Journal of Endocrinology, is the first and largest carried out on the association between PCOS and heart disease across three Nordic countries and highlights the importance of regular medical screenings in these women. 

We are most likely moving away from seeing PCOS as one single, uniform diagnosis but rather PCOS could be divided into different long-term risk patterns

Dorte Glintborg

In this collaborative study, Professor Dorte Glintborg from the University of Southern Denmark and Odense University Hospital, along with colleagues in Finland and Sweden, examined 127,517 women with PCOS and compared them to 587,810 women without PCOS, aged 15-50 years. The researchers followed these women for an average of 10 years and found that the risk of developing heart disease increased by 32% in women with PCOS. In addition, women with PCOS who were of normal weight (BMI < 25 kg/m2) and/ or without type 2 diabetes had a 40% greater risk of developing heart disease. In individual countries, the risk in Denmark, Finland, and Sweden was 37.7%, 48.6%, and 41.7%, respectively. 

Though the cardiovascular disease risk in women with PCOS is well-studied in smaller cohorts and from individual countries, there is little research on what occurs in women with PCOS who are of normal weight or do not have type 2 diabetes, let alone in three different countries. “To our knowledge, our study is the first to combine results from several nationwide study cohorts and evaluate the prospective risk of cardiovascular disease in women with polycystic ovary syndrome,” said Professor Glintborg. 

Professor Glintborg added: “In comparison with previous large-scale studies, we found comparable risk of cardiovascular disease in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) but these had not looked into normal-weight women with polycystic ovary syndrome as a separate group before. The fact that women with PCOS of normal weight also have an increased cardiovascular disease risk suggests that the biology of the condition itself – such as the high levels of testosterone – may affect the cardiovascular system, independently of weight and type 2 diabetes,” she said. 

“Women of normal weight with PCOS are more likely to have higher blood pressure than women of normal weight without PCOS — a well-established independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. This may mean that the high levels of testosterone these women generally have could cause the blood vessels to constrict and become less flexible, which might eventually strain the heart over time,” explained Professor Glintborg. “We are most likely moving away from seeing PCOS as one single, uniform diagnosis but rather PCOS could be divided into different long-term risk patterns, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. In the long term, we hope to be able to give each woman a more precise picture of her risk and a plan that extends beyond the next fertility treatment,” said Professor Glintborg. 


Source: European Society of Endocrinology 

11.05.2026

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