Researchers in Taiwan have unearthed further evidence that women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) are more likely to attempt suicide.
This new study, published in the latest Annals of Internal Medicine, backs up earlier research that links PCOS and suicide:
- A 2022 study out of the United Kingdom found “that the presence of a diagnosis of PCOS is associated with a greater prevalence of recent suicidal ideation, non-suicidal self-injury, and future suicidal intention, as well as greater self-reported scores on measures of rumination and deviant emotion regulation strategy use.” The research linked PCOS and suicidal intentions “through the indirect pathway of increased emotion dysregulation, recent suicidal ideation, and NSSI.”
- A 2016 Swedish study revealed that women suffering from PCOS were 40% more likely to try suicide than those without the diagnosis. More importantly, this study also showed that siblings shared some of that risk. Sisters of PCOS sufferers endure a 16% higher risk of suicide – even if they don’t share the condition.
Investigating a PCOS-Suicide Connection
PCOS is an endocrine condition that medical professionals have connected to atypical emotional regulation, elevated anxiety and depression levels, thoughts of self-harm, and suicidal ideation. PCOS remains the most prevalent endocrine condition worldwide, affecting anywhere between 8 percent to 13 percent of reproductive-age women. It’s also the leading cause of anovulatory infertility. Typical symptoms include acne, amenorrhea or oligomenorrhea, hirsutism, obesity, hyperandrogenism, and polycystic ovaries.
The cohort study, sampled from between 1997 and 2012, looked at 18,960 women with PCOS. The subject’s age varied from 12 to 64. Each of them had received a PCOS diagnosis. And none of them had a history of suicide before their diagnosis.
The researchers matched the women with 10 control subjects without a PCOS diagnosis, any ovarian disorder, or suicide attempt.
A Stark Difference
While the results weren’t entirely unexpected – given the earlier scientific exploration into this connection – they still painted a stark picture. The researchers found that women with PCOS had a 3 percent attempted suicide rate vs. 0.3 percent rate among the women in the control group.
“These findings emphasize the importance of clinician vigilance in monitoring the mental well-being and suicide risk of patients diagnosed with PCOS,” the study’s lead author, Mu-Hong Chen, MD, PhD, of Taipei Veterans General Hospital in Taiwan, wrote.
A Deeper Dive into the PCOS Data
This increased rate of self-harm remained steady across age groups – except for the younger adult women.
Consequently, the researchers surmised that suicidality could “be related to the persistence of psychological distress, body dissatisfaction, and reproductive concerns in this age group,” piled onto the litany of other problems women at that age face, whether it’s career challenges or relationship issues.
Finally, the researcher discovered that, along with the increased suicide risk, women with PCOS also:
- Scored higher on the Charlson Comorbidity Index.
- Attempted suicide at a younger age.
- Less time between attempts.
- And an increased number of all-cause clinical visits.
“This study underscores the heightened risk for suicide attempt that persons with PCOS face, even after adjustment for demographics, psychiatric comorbid conditions, physical conditions, and all-cause clinical visits,” the researchers wrote. “This suggests the importance of routine monitoring of mental health and suicide risk in persons diagnosed with PCOS.”