Introduction
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common endocrine disorder in women of reproductive age( Reference Goodarzi and Azziz 1 ). PCOS is often associated with severe insulin resistance as well as with defects in insulin secretion, and this appears to be related to the modulation of the activity of the key regulatory enzyme of androgen biosynthesis, cytochrome P450c17( Reference Dunaif 2 ). In addition, hyperinsulinaemia inhibits the production of sex hormone-binding globulin, which increases local availability of bioactive testosterone( Reference Plymate, Matej and Jones 3 ), and works synergistically with increased levels of luteinising hormone to enhance androgen production( Reference Nestler, Jakubowicz and de Vargas 4 ). The PCOS phenotype results in androgen excess, oligo-anovulatory infertility, polycystic ovaries on ultrasound examination, insulin resistance and cardiometabolic disorders, with overweight/obesity and visceral adiposity occurring in 30–70 % of PCOS women( Reference Altieri, Cavazza and Pasqui 5 ). Metabolic flexibility, i.e. the ability of the organism to adapt fuel oxidation to fuel availability by switching from lipid oxidation to glucose oxidation and vice versa, is impaired in women with PCOS as the consequence of insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinaemia( Reference Di Sarra, Tosi and Bonin 6 ). In PCOS women, serum androstenedione levels are well correlated with insulin sensitivity, and the severity of glucose intolerance increases along with the severity of the hyperandrogenic phenotype( Reference O’Reilly, Taylor and Crabtree 7 ). In line with these observations, analysis of First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I) data suggested that obesity and extreme obesity affecting women by the age of 20–24 years up to 32–41 years could suggest an underlying PCOS state which deserves appropriate workup( Reference Glueck, Dharashivkar and Wang 8 ).
PCOS shares a state of low-grade inflammation with other atherosclerosis-related non-transmissible chronic diseases, such as obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and CVD( Reference Wong, Meredith and Lin 9 , Reference Escobar-Morreale, Luque-Ramírez and González 10 ). Among several environmental determinants, a number of nutrients are known to cause or modulate the inflammatory status and contribute to the onset and maintenance of cardiometabolic diseases( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 – Reference Nasef, Mehta and Ferguson 13 ). Nevertheless, the spectrum of nutrients responsible for the onset of a pro-inflammatory state is also strictly associated with obesity, which per se is associated with chronic low-grade inflammation( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 , Reference Neale, Batterham and Tapsell 14 ). Besides the evidence linking inflammation and PCOS, uncertainty remains on the role of diet in controlling inter-individual variability in insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism and chronic low-grade inflammation in PCOS.
In light of the increased risk of reproductive and health-related issues in PCOS women across their life course, the aim of the present review is to provide an at-a-glance overview of the possible bi-directional mechanisms linking inflammation, androgen excess and carbohydrate intake in women with PCOS.
Nutrition and inflammation
General concepts
The innate (non-specific) immune system, the first-line defence mechanism against invading pathogens( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ), is able of promoting a chronic low-grade systemic inflammation state( Reference Hotamisligil 15 , Reference Chawla, Nguyen and Goh 16 ), in the absence of any systemic or local infection( Reference Hotamisligil 15 ), which is usually defined by the occurrence of 2- to 3-fold increase in plasma concentrations of cytokines and acute-phase proteins, with activation of a complex network of inflammatory signalling pathways. Among the environmental modifiable risk factors for chronic inflammation, unhealthy nutritional patterns are emerging for their association with the aberrant activation of the innate immune system triggering chronic low-grade systemic inflammation( Reference Galland 17 ). Strategic interest in diet-induced inflammation stemmed from both experimental and clinical evidence depicting a role for diet in driving atherogenesis through stimulation of the processes relating to initiation, progression and rupture of the atherosclerotic plaque( Reference Aravindhan and Madhumitha 18 ). Consequently, chronic low-grade systemic inflammation has been proposed as a potential link between insulin resistance, the metabolic syndrome, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and CVD( Reference Shah and Brownlee 19 ). As summarised in a recent review( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ), the International Life Sciences Institute’s European Branch (ILSI Europe) has extensively investigated the interaction between nutrition, food and inflammation. However, the variability in results across different dietary studies did not allow to draw final conclusions on the understanding of diet/nutrient-driven inflammation( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ). Despite the overall consensus on the ability of several foods and nutrients to modulate inflammation both acutely and chronically, a debate currently exists on which circulating marker best reflects the low-grade inflammation, and which experimental condition most appropriately detects the diet/nutrient-driven inflammation, i.e. the fasted v. the postprandial state( Reference Calder, Yaqoob and Thies 20 ). This controversy is further reinforced when considering that circulating inflammatory markers may not necessarily reflect the inflammation in tissue compartments or what happens locally in response to inflammatory challenges( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ).
An increase in inflammation occurs acutely following meal ingestion and lasts for about 4–8 h, although it has been reported to occur several times a day following eating( Reference Calder, Ahluwalia and Brouns 21 ). Unhealthy dietary patterns and single food components have been shown to induce inflammation through both direct and indirect effects, these latter being mediated by accumulation in white adipose tissue (WAT) of dysfunctional adipocytes and immune cell infiltration leading to the release of inflammatory cytokines( Reference Neale, Batterham and Tapsell 14 , Reference Galland 17 , Reference Paniagua 22 ). Cell populations englobed in WAT consist of pre-adipocytes and mature adipocytes, as well as immune and stromal cells. Pre-adipocytes have functional characteristics and transcriptional patterns of multipotent cells that are similar to immune cells, and can transdifferentiate into macrophages both in vitro and in vivo ( Reference Cousin, Munoz and Andre 23 , Reference Charrière, Cousin and Arnaud 24 ). Mature adipocytes share the ability with immune cells to secrete cytokines and activate the complement cascade much like mononuclear immune cells (MNC), then promoting a shift toward dominance of pro-inflammatory adipokines as opposed to anti-inflammatory adipokines( Reference Skurk, Alberti-Huber and Herder 25 ). Upon fat accumulation, adipose tissue (AT)-derived factors can activate CD8+ T cells and promote macrophage infiltration, which perpetuates the inflammatory response within the AT( Reference Nishimura, Manabe and Nagasaki 26 ). WAT contains resident M2-like macrophages, which have a role in AT homeostasis, and recruits M1-like macrophages, which are clustered in crown-like structures and contribute to inflammation and insulin resistance( Reference Hill, Reid Bolus and Hasty 27 – Reference Xu, Barnes and Yang 30 ). Macrophage infiltration predominates in omental v. subcutaneous fat and becomes exaggerated with central obesity, which is at higher risk of insulin resistance( Reference Harman-Boehm, Blüher and Redel 31 ). Post-absorptively, abdominal adipocytes and monocytes/macrophages show the ability to respond to acute postprandial elevation of several metabolic components of the meal, for example, TAG, SCFA, oxysterols and glucose, through a transient inflammatory response that is crucial for the development of insulin resistance, the metabolic syndrome and atherosclerosis( Reference Calder, Ahluwalia and Brouns 21 ). The resulting excess of body fat and ectopic fat storage could give rise to a condition of lipotoxicity and a pro-inflammatory/pro-oxidative state, linking nutrition to increased cardiovascular risk( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ). Because a detailed description of the inflammatory effects of each single nutrient is beyond the scope of the present review, we will focus in the next sections on the link between carbohydrates and inflammation, with particular regard to the interactions between nutrition, insulin resistance with compensatory hyperinsulinaemia, hyperandrogenism and low-grade inflammation in women with PCOS.
Carbohydrates and inflammation
Postprandial hyperglycaemia, an independent predictor of diabetes and CVD, may induce oxidative stress, i.e. the imbalance between free radical production and in vivo antioxidant defences( Reference Mohanty, Hamouda and Garg 32 ), which displays a positive correlation with the degree of hyperglycaemia( Reference Ceriello 33 ). Both oxidative stress and inflammation have overlapping detrimental effects that make their individual effects virtually indistinguishable( Reference Siti, Kamisah and Kamsiah 34 ). Acute hyperglycaemia induced by oral glucose loading has been demonstrated to increase inflammation and oxidative stress by generating reactive oxygen species (ROS) through different mechanisms, including non-enzymic glycation and imbalance in the NADH:NAD ratio induced by glucose( Reference Ceriello 35 ), in several cell types ranging from immune cells, including MNC, activated macrophages and T and B cells, and non-immune cells like adipocytes. In immune cells, ROS production is essential for eliminating invading pathogens, but it may also result in promoting sterile inflammation associated with the activation of phagocytes( Reference Lugrin, Rosenblatt-Velin and Parapanov 36 ). In particular, when an excess of glucose (or NEFA) reaches MNC and activated macrophages( Reference Dröge 37 ), a large number of reducing metabolites, including pyruvic acid and acetyl coenzyme A, are oxidised in mitochondria, leading to an enhanced activity of the electron transport chain and single electron transfer, which finally results in an increased ROS production( Reference Zuo, Zhu and Xu 38 ). ROS generation is an early key event in the onset and progression of a number of different diseases( Reference Alfadda and Sallam 39 ), and may cause oxidative modification of LDL-cholesterol, which is considered to be a main determinant of the development of atherosclerosis( Reference Parthasarathy, Steinberg and Witztum 40 ). ROS can act as a potential activator of a class of proteins involved in innate immunity, known as Toll-like receptors, thereby mediating the activation and expression in MNC and activating macrophages of NF-κB, a family of transcription factors prone to control apoptosis and pro-inflammatory cytokine expression via dissociation from the inhibitory protein, inhibitory κB( Reference Lugrin, Rosenblatt-Velin and Parapanov 36 ). In immune and non-immune cells, activated NF-κB translocates to the nucleus and promotes the transcription of cytokine genes capable of enhancing the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as TNF-α, a known mediator of insulin resistance, IL-6, IL-1β, monocyte chemotactic protein-1 and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1( Reference Buyken, Goletzke and Joslowski 41 ). Other pro-inflammatory transcription factors are also activated, including activator protein-1, forkhead box P3, interferon regulatory factor and signal transducer and activator of transcription families( Reference Pahwa and Jialal 42 ). Pro-inflammatory cytokines stimulate the liver to produce a variety of proteins known as acute-phase reactants, including C-reactive protein (CRP). CRP is involved in endothelial dysfunction and atherosclerotic process, and its level serves as an index of vascular inflammation and major predictor of CVD risk( Reference Soeki and Sata 43 ). IL-6 plays a key role in the liver synthesis of CRP, and increased levels of IL-6 are correlated with a greater occurrence of cardiac events( Reference Teeman, Kurti and Cull 44 ). In addition, IL-6 regulates the secretion of TNF-α, which induces the expression of adhesion molecules, such as vascular cell adhesion protein-1 and intercellular adhesion molecule-1( Reference Güray, Erbay and Güray 45 ). These latter have been involved in the development of atherosclerosis and production of other inflammatory cytokines( Reference Teeman, Kurti and Cull 44 ).
Dietary carbohydrates and inflammation
The effect of postprandial glucose excursions mostly depends on the time of exposure to the postprandial glucose peak, a major contributor of chronic sustained hyperglycaemia, as well as on the magnitude of postprandial spikes, a reflection of glucose variability, with both contributing to protein glycation and activation of oxidative stress and inflammation. These two main mechanisms can lead to diabetic and cardiovascular complications( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ). Esposito et al. ( Reference Esposito, Nappo and Marfella 46 ) reported that hyperglycaemic spikes are able to affect cytokine concentrations more than continuous hyperglycaemia, at least in the short term, suggesting that an oxidative mechanism could mediate the effect of hyperglycaemia. In a number of studies, the inflammatory effects of carbohydrates were analysed in association with the glycaemic index (GI) of foods, an index quantifying the postprandial blood glucose responses to the carbohydrate in different foods( Reference Wolever, Jenkins and Jenkins 47 , Reference Wolever, Vuksan and Eshuis 48 ), and the glycaemic load (GL), the product of the GI of a specific food and its carbohydrate content( Reference Sheard, Clark and Brand-Miller 49 ), which provide an indication of glucose available for energy or storage following a carbohydrate-containing meal. There is evidence supporting the benefits of low-GI dietary patterns on insulin resistance( Reference Rizkalla, Taghrid and Laromiguiere 50 , Reference Ebbeling, Leidig and Sinclair 51 ), while foods with a high GI exert opposite effects( Reference Brynes, Mark Edwards and Ghatei 52 ). Nevertheless, the relationship between dietary GI or GL and low-grade inflammation remains debatable, and the usefulness of GI and GL has been questioned due to the failure to consider the high intra- and inter-subject variation in insulin and glucose response to the ingestion of specific foods, as well as when foods are combined in a mixed meal( Reference Venn and Green 53 ).
Among the pro-inflammatory dietary patterns, particular concern has been raised by high-energy diets with high content in complex carbohydrates, as well as foods with a high GI scale, low in fibres, rich in refined carbohydrate, or high in fat, all of which are collectively included in the so-called Western diet( Reference Esposito, Nappo and Marfella 46 , Reference Cordain, Eaton and Sebastian 54 – Reference Feliciano Pereira, das Graças de Almeida and Alfenas Rde 56 ). The Western diet is responsible for supra-physiological postprandial spikes in glucose and lipids, resulting in a pro-inflammatory state( Reference Galland 17 , Reference Esposito and Giugliano 57 , Reference Diamanti-Kandarakis, Papalou and Kandaraki 58 ). Hu et al. ( Reference Hu, Block and Norkus 59 ) observed a positive association between dietary GI and oxidative stress markers as measured in healthy adults by two lipid peroxidation markers, such as malondialdehyde and F2-isoprostanes, thus concluding that a low-GI diet, not a low-carbohydrate diet, could be beneficial in reducing oxidative stress. The pro-inflammatory effects of high-GI diets have also been confirmed in large epidemiological studies. In particular, in the Harvard Women’s Health Study, serum CRP levels increased progressively across quintiles of dietary GI( Reference Levitan, Cook and Stampfer 60 ). In addition, high-GI carbohydrates have been reported to increase NF-κB activation and NF-κB binding in MNC of young, lean healthy subjects( Reference Dickinson, Hancock and Petocz 61 ), such that levels of NF-κB were expressed at three times higher levels among lean subjects consuming high-GI meals when compared with controls( Reference Buyken, Flood and Empson 62 ). On the other hand, studies have suggested that healthy eating patterns are characterised by reduced postprandial glycaemia and lipaemia, and are associated with reduced concentrations of low-grade inflammation markers. For example, dietary patterns with low GI( Reference Buyken, Flood and Empson 62 , Reference Gaskins, Mumford and Rovner 63 ) or high fibre consumption are associated with lower serum concentrations of CRP( Reference North, Venter and Jerling 64 ), which are conceivably related to a beneficial effect on glycaemia( Reference Bo, Ciccone and Guidi 65 ). Likewise, diets low in GL and high in whole grains were found to exert a protective effect against inflammation in diabetic patients( Reference Qi and Hu 66 ), and an inverse relationship was reported in epidemiological studies between CRP levels and dietary intake of fibre, such as in individuals receiving the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet, which is naturally high in fibre (g fibre/d) or consists of a fibre-supplemented standard diet (30 g psyllium fibre/d)( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ). At odds with these observations, the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study reported that a relatively high consumption of both soluble and insoluble fibre (24 g/d) was inversely associated with IL-6 and TNF-α but not with CRP levels( Reference Ma, Hébert and Li 67 ). Probably, the inflammatory response may vary depending on the type of carbohydrate. As such, Kallio et al. ( Reference Kallio, Kolehmainen and Laaksonen 68 ) reported that a 12-week oat–wheat–potato diet resulted in a higher postprandial insulin response leading to late hypoglycaemia compared with a rye–pasta diet. Moreover, a carbohydrate-rich diet up-regulated genes relating to metabolic stress in abdominal subcutaneous AT of men and women with the metabolic syndrome, even in the absence of changes in body weight and insulin sensitivity( Reference Kallio, Kolehmainen and Laaksonen 68 ). Finally, it is important to consider that fructose, a common plant-derived sweetener that is habitually consumed in diets rich in carbohydrates and lipids, promotes a greater pro-inflammatory state than glucose, and its effects are amplified when it is associated with glucose and lipids. In fact, chronic consumption of fructose generates 100 times more ROS than glucose through different mechanisms, such as hepatic phosphate deficiency, and its hepatic metabolism generates potent glycation agents, such as methylglyoxal, leading to cellular stress and altered insulin signalling( Reference Jegatheesan and De Bandt 69 , Reference Barrea, Di Somma and Muscogiuri 70 ). Hepatic phosphate deficiency leads to the accumulation of AMP resulting in the increased production of uric acid, which in turn stimulates the production of ROS via activation of transforming growth factor-β and NADPH oxidase 4( Reference Jegatheesan and De Bandt 69 ). In addition, fructose has been shown to promote the synthesis of SFA, such as palmitate( Reference Sun and Empie 71 ), which are channelled to distinct cellular metabolic fates with direct and indirect involvement in the development of insulin resistance in adipocytes and skeletal muscle cells( Reference Kennedy, Martinez and Chuang 72 ).
Nutrition and inflammation in polycystic ovary syndrome
A pro-inflammatory state has emerged as a key contributor to insulin resistance and CVD risk factors in PCOS women( Reference Escobar-Morreale, Luque-Ramírez and González 10 ). Besides the established role of abdominal adiposity, there is a suggestion that metabolic and ovarian dysfunction associated with PCOS could be enhanced by nutrient-induced oxidative stress and inflammation( Reference González 73 ). As well as in obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus, also in PCOS inflammation contributes to generate insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinaemia( Reference González, Sia and Shepard 74 ), although peculiar mediators such as hyperandrogenism play a pivotal role in metabolic outcomes related to the syndrome. Both hyperinsulinaemia and hyperandrogenism act as promoters of inflammation in PCOS, and the triad of insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism and low-grade inflammation works bi-directionally in a self-perpetuating vicious cycle that underlies the pathophysiology of PCOS( Reference Shorakae, Teede and de Courten 75 ). The direct exposure of ovarian theca cells to pro-inflammatory stimuli in vitro increases androgen production, while in vivo circulating and molecular markers of oxidative stress and inflammation are highly correlated with circulating androgens( Reference González 76 ). Pioneering studies by Dunaif & Graf( Reference Dunaif and Graf 77 ) demonstrated that circulating androgens are influenced by insulin levels independent of variations of gonadotropin release only in PCOS women, while such a correlation is not present in control women. It is also worth noting that up to 50 % of hyperandrogenic women with PCOS are of normal weight and insulin sensitive( Reference Macut, Bjekić-Macut and Rahelić 78 ), and increased circulating androgens might exert anti-inflammatory effects through their lipolytic action( Reference Wahrenberg, Ek and Reynisdottir 79 ). It is also worth noting that the activity of the sympathetic nervous system, which controls resting energy expenditure at the systemic and local levels( Reference Thorp and Schlaich 80 ), is enhanced in PCOS as much as in obesity, insulin resistance and hypertension( Reference Mancia, Bousquet and Elghozi 81 , Reference Lara, Dissen and Leyton 82 ). Rodent models of PCOS demonstrated an increased ovarian sympathetic outflow and elevated intra-ovarian synthesis of nerve growth factor, which may be involved in triggering ovarian disease( Reference Lara, Dissen and Leyton 82 ). Patients with PCOS have evidence of increased muscle sympathetic nerve activity, altered heart rate variability and attenuated heart rate recovery post-exercise, compared with age- and BMI-matched controls, suggesting a generalised increase in sympathetic nervous system activity( Reference Lansdown and Rees 83 ). Whether targeting sympathetic over-activity in this condition has favourable effects warrants further investigation.
A potential key role in the pathophysiology of PCOS is played by nutrients like glucose and saturated fat, which can promote inflammation in women with PCOS and stimulate ovarian androgen production independent of excess adiposity and insulin resistance( Reference González 73 , Reference González, Sia and Shepard 74 ). Most studies examining markers of the pro-inflammatory state in PCOS have focused on the measurement of circulating CRP and adiponectin levels( Reference Shen, Shen and Liou 84 , Reference Ouchi, Kihara and Funahashi 85 ). The antidiabetic, anti-inflammatory, anti-atherogenic and cardioprotective effects of adiponectin are widely recognised, where the high-molecular-weight isoforms represent the major relevant forms in its insulin-sensitivity activities( Reference Nigro, Scudiero and Monaco 86 ). However, previous reports on serum adiponectin levels in women with PCOS have provided conflicting results( Reference Wickham, Cheang and Clore 87 ). Like in CVD and obesity( Reference Bastard, Maachi and Lagathu 88 ), also in PCOS patients CRP levels are a reliable circulating marker of chronic low-grade inflammation( Reference Minihane, Vinoy and Russell 11 ), although adiposity is a potential confounding determinant of CRP elevations in PCOS, and CRP is expressed at levels that are below the range predictive of metabolic or CVD risk( Reference González 76 ). Of note, MNC make use of ingested glucose and lipids for mitochondrial respiration during energy metabolism and generate NADPH oxidase, the ROS-producing enzyme, which in turn promotes the transcription of TNF-α and IL-6 genes. MNC have been extensively investigated in relation to the link connecting diet to inflammation in PCOS, especially when considering that dietary components, such as glucose and lipids, can trigger an inflammatory response in MNC( Reference González 76 ). Glucose ingestion is a promoting mechanism of inflammation in PCOS, as it has been shown to activate NF-κB in MNC and in MNC-derived macrophages migrating into the stromal–vascular compartment of expanded AT of obese individuals in response to cell hypoxia( Reference Cinti, Mitchell and Barbatelli 28 , Reference González, Sia and Shepard 74 ). González et al. ( Reference González, Sia and Shepard 74 ) demonstrated that glucose ingestion in women with PCOS stimulated ROS-related oxidative stress and increased NF-κB activation independent of obesity. These authors further observed that MNC-derived cytokine release was inversely related to insulin sensitivity and directly related to androgens, thus leading to the hypothesis that the glucose-stimulated inflammatory response from MNC played an independent role in promoting insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, as well as inflammation in PCOS( Reference González, Sia and Shepard 74 ). González( Reference González 76 ) summarised the evidence that TNF-α and IL-6 release from circulating MNC is increased in PCOS both upon glucose ingestion in vivo and after glucose exposure in vitro, and is associated with insulin resistance, thus suggesting that diet-induced inflammation in PCOS is linked to insulin resistance and atherogenesis. In this scenario, nutrition could represent a complementary component of a new ‘deadly quartet’ of metabolic risk factors for PCOS in association with hyperinsulinaemia, hyperandrogenism and low-grade inflammation, with hyperandrogenism possibly acting as a precursor of diet-induced inflammation( Reference González 76 ). The results of clinical trials set up to investigate in vivo the effects of anti-inflammatory therapy on circulating ovarian androgens in women with PCOS following lipid ingestion and glucose infusion will lead to an understanding of these intriguing nutritional–endocrine connections( Reference Gonzalez 89 ).
Indeed, diet is a key determinant of excessive body weight in PCOS and its relationship with PCOS is possibly influenced by geographical determinants( Reference Carmina, Legro and Stamets 90 ). A survey on overweight and obese US women with PCOS-related infertility showed poor dietary intake, particularly in terms of whole grains, fibre, and Fe, and eating behaviours inconsistent with achieving a healthy body weight, as well as low scores for PCOS-related quality of life( Reference Turner-McGrievy, Davidson and Billings 91 ). Dissimilarly, a study on overweight and obese Italian PCOS women found no difference in terms of energy, macronutrient and advanced glycosylated end-product intake as compared with controls, yet PCOS women were characterised by a higher consumption of cheese and high-GI starchy sweets and a preference for raw oil rather than other cooked fats( Reference Altieri, Cavazza and Pasqui 5 ). Women with PCOS showed impaired satiation and alterations in satiety–appetite hormones, for example, lower baseline levels and responsiveness of ghrelin to meals with varying carbohydrate content as well as higher leptin concentrations than BMI-matched controls( Reference Brzechffa, Jakimiuk and Agarwal 92 – Reference Moran, Noakes and Clifton 94 ). On the other hand, it is widely recognised that body weight reduction yields marked beneficial effects on insulin resistance, hyperandrogenic phenotype and gynaecological problems of PCOS women( Reference Moran, Pasquali and Teede 95 ) and PCOS may even resolve after weight loss induced by bariatric surgery( Reference Escobar-Morreale, Botella-Carretero and Alvarez-Blasco 96 ). A healthy dietary habit with an adequate ratio of complex to simple carbohydrates appears to be appropriate in light of the link between nutrition, hyperinsulinaemia, hyperandrogenism and chronic low-grade inflammation, and a low-fat/high-complex carbohydrate diet can promote weight loss and ameliorate metabolic, hormonal and reproductive homeostasis of PCOS( 97 ). There is, however, evidence that the chemical structure of food and botanical structure rather than the amount of fibre or the type of cereal in the food determine postprandial insulin responses to grain products and insulin resistance( Reference McKeown, Meigs and Liu 98 ), and these effects may be mediated through glucose insulinotropic peptide and glucagon-like peptide-1( Reference Juntunen, Niskanen and Liukkonen 99 , Reference Barrea, Annunziata and Muscogiuri 100 ). It is also worth noting that metabolic inflexibility in insulin-resistant individuals fails to adequately oxidise fatty acids, and it diminishes the ability to switch from glucose to lipid oxidation during overnight fasting, thus leading to lipid accumulation in skeletal muscle and further impairment of insulin signalling( Reference Galgani, Moro and Ravussin 101 ). Weight loss can improve insulin-mediated suppression of fatty acid oxidation in insulin-resistant individuals( Reference Bonadonna, Groop and Zych 102 , Reference Corpeleijn, Saris and Blaak 103 ) and prevents the effects of hyperinsulinaemia on weight gain( Reference Mehran, Templeman and Brigidi 104 ).
Dietary intervention in polycystic ovary syndrome
Dietary modifications that lead to a reduction in postprandial glucose and hyperinsulinaemia could have important implications in improving fatty acid oxidation, promoting weight loss, and preventing further weight gain in women with PCOS( Reference Kopp, Kopp and Festa 105 ). In a prospective study in infertile women seeking counselling, total carbohydrate intake and dietary GL were found to be positively related to ovulatory infertility in analyses adjusted for age, BMI, smoking, parity, physical activity, recency of contraception, total energy intake, protein intake and other dietary variables( Reference Chavarro, Rich-Edwards and Rosner 106 ). In PCOS women, uncertainty remains on whether manipulation of dietary components could aid the clinical management of the syndrome. Recent interest has stimulated research on moderate increases in dietary protein as a strategy to tackle global problems of PCOS, for example, glucose intake, androgen alterations, weight accrual and cardiometabolic risk( Reference Stamets, Taylor and Kunselman 107 , Reference Moran and Norman 108 ). In a cross-over study, Douglas et al. ( Reference Douglas, Gower and Darnell 109 ) reported that a low-carbohydrate diet (43 % of total energy) for 16 d can promote significant reductions in fasting and post-challenge insulin concentrations, which may over time improve the reproductive and endocrine outcomes of PCOS women. These results were confirmed by Marsh et al. ( Reference Marsh, Steinbeck and Atkinson 110 ) in ninety-six PCOS women, in which changes in insulin sensitivity and clinical outcomes were assessed during a dieting programme achieving similar weight loss (4–5 % of initial body weight) after consumption of a low-GI diet compared with a conventional healthy diet for 12 months. Both diets were designed as reduced-energy, low-fat, low-saturated fat, moderate-to-high-fibre diets with similar macronutrient distribution but differing carbohydrate content (GI, 40 v. 59 %; GL, 74 v. 109 g). Of interest, this study evidenced that with modest weight loss both the treatments led to similar improvements in blood lipids, androgens and markers of inflammation, but only women on a low-GI diet showed improvements in menstrual disorders, whole-body insulin sensitivity and levels of fibrinogen, an acute-phase protein of inflammation( Reference Marsh, Steinbeck and Atkinson 110 ). In evaluating the inflammatory pattern, Mehrabani et al. ( Reference Mehrabani, Salehpour and Amiri 111 ) investigated the effects of a high-protein, low-GL hypoenergetic diet (40 % carbohydrates with <20 GL, 30 % protein, 30 % fat) as compared with a conventional hypoenergetic diet (55 % carbohydrate, 15 % protein, 30 % fat) on reproductive hormones, inflammatory markers, lipids, glucose and insulin levels in sixty obese women with PCOS. Results demonstrated that both diets significantly led to reduced body weight and androgen levels, but only the combination of high-protein and low-GL foods led to a significant increase in insulin sensitivity and a decrease in high-sensitivity CRP levels( Reference Mehrabani, Salehpour and Amiri 111 ). Subsequently, Gower & Goss( Reference Gower and Goss 112 ) evaluated if dietary restriction of carbohydrates would benefit body composition and metabolic health in thirty women with PCOS randomised to receive a low-fat diet (55, 18 and 27 % of energy from carbohydrate, protein and fat, respectively) or a low-carbohydrate diet (41, 19 and 40 %, respectively) for 8 weeks. The low-carbohydrate diet resulted in significant decreases in fasting insulin and glucose, and a significant increase in insulin sensitivity, while no changes were observed consuming the low-fat diet. While markers of inflammation did not change in response to either of the two diets, changes in intra-abdominal AT were associated with changes in TNF-α levels independent of changes in total body fat mass( Reference Gower and Goss 112 ).
Different studies showed that carbohydrates from dairy products and starch-based foods caused greater postprandial insulin secretion than carbohydrates from non-starchy vegetables and fruits. In a prospective 8-week dietary intervention using a low-starch/low-dairy product diet, Pohlmeier et al. ( Reference Pohlmeier, Phy and Watkins 113 ) reported that this approach proved useful in increasing fat oxidation in overweight and obese women with PCOS. More recently, Eslamian et al. ( Reference Eslamian, Baghestani and Eghtesad 114 ) investigated in a case–control study the association between dietary carbohydrate components and PCOS using a validated semi-quantitative FFQ. The results of this study showed higher dietary GI and GL values in women with PCOS than controls, while fibre intake was inversely associated with PCOS.
In a study investigating the effects of fructose in PCOS, Johnson et al. ( Reference Johnson, Holven and Nordstrand 115 ) examined whether an 8-week low-fructose, low-energy diet could be superior to a traditional low-energy diet based on fructose-rich liquid meal replacements, with respect to improvement of cardiometabolic risk factors and reproductive hormones. The authors failed to obtain significant differences between the two diet regimens in terms of body weight reduction, modification in cardiometabolic risk factors, including CRP levels and androgens. Little but positive experience has been reported on a low-energy ketogenic diet (consisting of fewer than 20 g carbohydrate per d) in PCOS women in terms of body weight, free testosterone, luteinising hormone:follicle-stimulating hormone ratio and fasting insulin( Reference Mavropoulos, Yancy and Hepburn 116 ). It is also expected that manipulation of dietary protein content could favour psychological outcomes in PCOS women, namely depression and self-esteem, and predispose to improvement in satiety, dietary compliance and steroid production( Reference Galletly, Moran and Noakes 117 ). Regarding safety issues, it is until now unclear how low the carbohydrates content of a diet should be or for how long a low-carbohydrate diet can be administered so as to achieve optimal results without potential adverse events( Reference McGrice and Porter 118 ). Challenging these previous views, however, there is suggestion that energy restriction seems more important than macronutrient composition, and there is still little evidence to support a universal role for high-protein diets on PCOS outcomes relating to fertility, endocrine/metabolic parameters and weight loss( Reference Frary, Bjerre and Glintborg 119 , Reference Moran, Ko and Misso 120 ).
Since oxidative stress and inflammation occur in PCOS even in the absence of excess adiposity, a promising approach could be represented by dietary strategies that are capable of preventing inflammation, and hence insulin resistance. Anti-inflammation nutrition works upstream of primary molecular targets of inflammation to reduce the dietary factors that activate NF-κB to generate silent inflammation. Anti-inflammatory approaches encompassing low-GL foods, low n-6 fatty acids content and high n-3 fatty acids, combined according to the 1-2-3 nutritional rule-of-thumb proposed by the International Sports Sciences Association for macronutrients ratio (approximately one part fat, two parts protein and three parts carbohydrates), have been shown to improve insulin resistance and metabolic outcomes in the general population( Reference Sears 121 ). Also, dietary intake of nuts, a source of MUFA and n-3 PUFA, is increasingly seen as a strategy to exert beneficial effects on lipids, androgens and possibly inflammatory markers in PCOS women( Reference Kalgaonkar, Almario and Gurusinghe 122 ). Growing interest is focusing on the effects of the Mediterranean diet on PCOS outcomes( Reference Moran, Grieger and Mishra 123 , Reference Muscogiuri, Palomba and Laganà 124 ). As such, energy restriction and a healthy lifestyle along with an anti-inflammatory nutrition approach are all reckoned as beneficial for PCOS outcomes, particularly when low-GI foods are associated with the Mediterranean diet, decreased red/processed meat, low sugar and saturated fats, phytochemicals and antioxidants, as well as small frequent meals( Reference Moran, Grieger and Mishra 123 ). A 12-week study in seventy-five overweight women using a Mediterranean-inspired low-GL hypoenergetic diet (25 % protein, 25 % fat and 50 % carbohydrate) showed favourable effects on body composition, menstrual cyclicity, blood pressure, glucose homeostasis, dyslipidaemia and surrogate measures of CVD risk( Reference Salama, Amine and Salem 125 ). Likewise, the DASH diet has gained increasing interest in the dietary management of PCOS patients due to its dietary content of antioxidant foods, such as fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy products and ions along with low saturated fats, cholesterol, refined grains and sweets( Reference Azadbakht, Surkan and Esmaillzadeh 126 ). Compared with a control group, consumption of a hypoenergetic DASH eating pattern for 8–12 weeks in overweight and obese women with PCOS resulted in the improvement of insulin resistance, TAG, VLDL-cholesterol and serum high-sensitivity CRP levels, and a significant increase in antioxidant levels along with improvements in abdominal fat accumulation( Reference Asemi, Samimi and Tabassi 127 – Reference Azadi-Yazdi, Karimi-Zarchi and Salehi-Abargouei 129 ). Together, this evidence suggests that women with PCOS should be advised to consume a diet that includes an increase in fibre and a decrease in refined carbohydrates, as well as a decrease in trans- and saturated fats and an increase in n-3 (and n-9) fatty acids. Foods that contain anti-inflammatory compounds (fibre, n-3 fatty acids, vitamin E and resveratrol) could also help improving the metabolic and hyperandrogenic profile of PCOS patients( Reference Liepa, Sengupta and Karsies 130 ). In addition, vitamins such as vitamin C and β-carotene, inositol that belongs to the group of B vitamins, vitamin-like coenzyme Q10, minerals, such as Zn, Cu, Mg and Se, and other compounds, including resveratrol and N-acetyl cysteine, have been suggested as auxiliary antioxidants in PCOS. All these antioxidants could either stop directly the oxidation chain reaction or enhance the activity of main antioxidants; nevertheless, systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials have been provided only on a restricted number of these compounds( Reference Thakker, Raval and Patel 131 – Reference Banaszewska, Wrotyńska-Barczyńska and Spaczynski 134 ).
Conclusions
Epidemiological studies and large clinical trials have identified a number of potential diet-derived anti-inflammatory and pro-inflammatory components involved in the pathogenesis of PCOS, particularly those linking carbohydrate intake to low-grade chronic inflammation. Mutually with hyperinsulinaemia, hyperandrogenism and low-grade inflammation, an unhealthy diet should be thus viewed as a key component of the ‘deadly quartet’ of metabolic risk factors associated with PCOS pathophysiology, as depicted in Fig. 1. Although it is evident that the inflammatory response driven by carbohydrates is highly variable and that a full understanding of the source of heterogeneity is lacking, the results of large clinical trials set up to investigate in vivo the effects of anti-inflammatory therapy on circulating ovarian androgens in women with PCOS will lend support to the hypothesis of these intriguing nutritional–endocrine connections. The recognition of a robust diet–inflammation–health association makes the adoption of healthy nutritional approaches a key future preventive and therapeutic target in PCOS. A rational approach to the dietary management of women with PCOS under the guidance of registered dietitians will help the endocrinologists engage with these patients and increase the knowledge of how diet and lifestyle factors influence the disorder and how they may be changed to improve prognosis without exclusive reliance on only pharmacological treatments. Considering the substantial role of chronic low-grade inflammation in the pathogenesis of numerous chronic diseases, and acknowledging the health problems relating to PCOS in women across their entire life course, including infertility and long-term cardiometabolic consequences, there is a need to implement the strategic nutritional approach by expert dietitians, so as to design appropriate anti-inflammatory dietary interventions for the prevention and treatment of diet-induced inflammation in PCOS.
Acknowledgements
The present review received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
The authors’ responsibilities were as follows: L. B., P. M. and S. S. were responsible for the concept of this paper and drafted the manuscript; G. M., C. D. S., M. S., F. O., G. A. and A. C. provided a critical review of the paper. All authors contributed to and agreed on the final version of the manuscript.
There are no conflicts of interest.