W5 - Correlates of endogenous sex hormone concentrations in DM trial

Investigator Names and Contact Information

Introduction/Intent

Endogenous estrogens may be positively related to risk of breast cancer (1) and negatively related to risk of coronary heart disease and osteoporotic fractures (2,3). After menopause, the ovarian production of estrogen and progesterone ceases, while the production of various androgens continues. Most women continue to have detectable concentrations of circulating estrogen after menopause, however, the most prevalent being estrogen (4). After menopause, estrone is produced predominantly through the peripheral conversion, mostly in adipose tissue of adrenal androstenedione. Estradiol, the most metabolically active of the estrogens, is produced in postmenopausal women through the reduction of estrone through the aromatization of ovarian and adrenal testosterone (derived from the conversion of androstenedione and dephyroepiandrosterone). Only a small fraction of circulating estrogens persists in the "free' or unbound (thought to be more metabolically active ) state (less that 2% of total); the remainder is bound to either SHBG (55%) or albumin (45%) (5).

Circulating sex hormone concentrations have been found in several small series to be related to body weight, body mass index, age, exercise habits, and smoking and alcohol use (6-10). There had not been a simultaneous analysis of all of these variables in a large sample of postmenopausal women, as available in WHI. Nor has the concentration of endogenous sex hormones been compared between different racial and ethnic groups.

  1. To examine the relationship between various factors and concentrations of endogenous sex hormones in a group of post menopausal women.
  2. To examine the concentrations of sex hormones in different racial and ethnic groups
  3. To compare relationships between these variable and these sex hormones in White, African-American, Hispanic , and Asian-American women..

Results/Findings

See Publications: 20, 280. WHI publications by study lists published WHI papers that have been generated by ancillary studies. A complete list of WHI papers is available in the Papers of this website.

References

  1. Tonolia P, Levitz. M, Zeleniuch-Jacquotte A, et al. A prospective study of endogenous estrogens and breast cancer in postmenopausal women. J Natl Cancer Inst 1995; 87: 190-197.
  2. Colditz, GA, Willett WC, Stampfer MJ, et al. Menopause and the risk of coronary heart disease in women. N Engl J Med 1987; 316:1105-1110.
  3. Cauley JA, Gutai JP, Sandler RB, et al. The relationship of endogenous estrogen to bone density and bone area in normal postmenopausal women. Am J Epidemiol 1986; 124:753-761.
  4. Meldrum D, Davidson D, Tateryn, Judd HL. Changes in circulating steroids with aging in postmenopausal women. ObstetGynecol 1981; 57:624-628.
  5. Siiteri PK, Murai JT, Hammond GL, et al. The serum transport of steroid hormones. Recent Program Hormones Res 1982; 38:457-510.
  6. Nelson ME, Meredith CN, Dawson-Hughes B, et al. Hormone and bone mineral status in endurance-trained and sedentary postmenopausal women. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1988; 66:927-933.
  7. Cauley JA, Gutai JP, Kuller LH, et al. The epidemiology of serum sex hormones in postmenopausal women. Am J Epidemiol 1989; 129:1120-1131.
  8. Kirschner MA, Samojlik E, Drejka M, et al. Androgen-estrogen metabolism in women with upper body vs. lower body obesity. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1990; 70:473-479.
  9. Kaye SA, Folsom AR, Soler JT, et al. Associations of body mass and fat distribution with sex hormone concentrations in postmenopausal women. Int J Epidemiol 1991; 20:151-156.
  10. Newcomb PA, Klein R, Klein BEK, et al. Association of dietary and life-style factors with sex hormones in postmenopausal women. Epidemiology 1995; 6:318-321.

Data Dictionaries and Study Documentation

This section displays all study-related data dictionaries and study-related files. The investigators for this study will upload the datasets, data dictionaries, and other study-related files. Study-related files will be made available to the public one year after the completion of the ancillary study, with the exception of the datasets, which will only be available to those with a Data Distribution Agreement. Those will be available to those with permission to download and will appear as a download link next to the data dictionary

Data Dictionaries

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Description
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Study Documents

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Description
NameW5 case control selection.docDescription

Related Papers

Age, body mass, usage of exogenous estrogen, and lifestyle factors in relation to circulating sex hormone-binding globulin concentrations in postmenopausal women

Atsushi Goto et al., 2013/9 PubMed #24048437 MSID: 1218
Circulating concentrations of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) have been associated with cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and hormone-dependent cancers; however, correlates of SHBG concentrations are not well understood.We comprehensively investigated correlates of SHBG concentrations among 13 547 women who participated in the Women's Health Initiative and who had SHBG measurements. We estimated study- and ethnicity-specific associations of age, reproductive histo...
Keywords: Plasma Sex Hormone Binding Globulin (Shbg); Dietary Factors
Related Studies: 90, 110, 167, BA7, BA9, BA21, W5, W9, W10, W18

Relation of dietary carbohydrates intake to circulating sex hormone-binding globulin levels in postmenopausal women

Mengna Huang et al., 2017/3 PubMed #28304147 MSID: 2447
BACKGROUND: Low circulating levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) have been shown to be a direct and strong risk factor for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and hormone-dependent cancers, although the relation between various aspects of dietary carbohydrates and SHBG levels remains unexplored in population studies. METHODS: Among postmenopausal women with available SHBG measurements at baseline (n = 11,159) in the Women's Health Initiative, we conducted a comprehensive assessmen...
Keywords: Dietary Carbohydrates; Glycemic Index; Glycemic Load; Sex Hormone Binding Globulin (Shbg); Type 2 Diabetes

Sex hormones, sex hormones binding globulin (SHBG), and risk of ischemic stroke in men and women in WHI and TOPMed Stroke

Approved Proposal, Madsen, Tracy et al., 2020/11 MSID: 4327
Keywords: Stroke; Sex Hormone Binding Globulin; Mendelian Randomization; Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms; Ischemic Stroke
Related Studies: 90, 110, 238, BA7, BA9, BA21, W5, W9, W10, W18

Relation of BMI and physical activity to sex hormones in postmenopausal women

Anne McTiernan et al., 2006/9 PubMed #17030978 MSID: 280
Levels of estrogen, androgen, and prolactin have been related to risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. However, the determinants of these hormone concentrations are not established. The purpose of this study was to examine correlates of endogenous sex hormones.Associations among adiposity, physical activity, and diet and concentrations of estradiol, free estradiol, estrone, testosterone, free testosterone, sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone, dehydroepian...
Keywords: Diet; Activity
Related Studies: W5

Relation of demographic factors, menstrual history, reproduction and medication use to sex hormones in postmenopausal women

Anne McTiernan et al., 2007/5 PubMed #18297397 MSID: 20
In postmenopausal women, levels of estrogens, androgens, and perhaps prolactin have been related to risk of breast and other hormonal cancers in women. However, the determinants of these hormone concentrations have not been firmly established. Associations among various demographic, menstrual, and reproductive factors, medication use and endogenous sex hormone concentrations (estradiol, free estradiol, estrone, estrone sulfate, testosterone, free testosterone, sex hormone binding globulin, andro...
Keywords: Endogenous Sex Hormones; Ethnicity
Related Studies: W5

Circulating SHBG (Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin) and risk of ischemic stroke: Findings from the WHI

Tracy Madsen et al., 2020/2 PubMed #32078494 MSID: 3372
Abstract Background and Purpose- Circulating levels of SHBG (sex hormone-binding globulin) have been inversely linked to obesity, diabetes mellitus, and other cardiometabolic disorders. It remains uncertain whether low SHBG is prospectively predictive of stroke risk, particularly in women. We investigated whether SHBG is associated with risk of incident ischemic stroke (IS) among women in the WHI (Women's Health Initiative). Methods- From an observational cohort of 161 808 postmenopausal women e...
Keywords: Ischemic Stroke; Sex Hormone Binding Globulin; Sex Hormones; Prevention; Sex Differences