REDUCED SEX HORMONE BINDING GLOBULIN AND DERIVED FREE TESTOSTERONE LEVELS IN WOMEN WITH SEVERE ACNE

Abstract
Reduced circulating sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels were found in 54% of a group of women with moderate to severe acne and in 60% of another group of twenty‐three women who had acne complicated by hirsutism and/or irregular menstrual cycles. The concentrations of SHBG for the women with acne alone (mean 48 ± 24 nmol/l) and for those with acne and hirsutes (mean 39 ± 18 nmol/l) were compared with the SHBG concentrations of fifteen unaffected women with normal menstrual cycles (mean 70 ± 19 nmol/l). The differences in mean SHBG values for both groups of women with acne were significant (P < 0·001) on comparison with the mean for the unaffected women.Twenty‐nine per cent of the women with acne had elevated testosterone values (mean testosterone concentration for the group 1·5 ± 0·3 nmol/l) and 41% had elevated‘derived’free testosterone levels (mean 21 ± 6 pmol/l). Of the women with acne and hirsutes 65% had elevated plasma testosterone levels (mean 2·1 ± 0·6 nmol/l) and 89% had elevated free testosterone concentrations (mean 31 ± 10 pmol/l). The mean values for testosterone and free testosterone in the plasma of unaffected women (mean testosterone concentration 1·1 ± 0·3 nmol/l and free testosterone 13 ± 4 pmol/l) were significantly lower than in women with acne alone (P < 0·01 and P < 0·001) and in women with acne and hirsutism (P < 0·001).This study indicates that a deficiency in SHBG and an elevation in‘derived’free testosterone is a frequent finding in women with severe acne and may be a significant factor in the aetiology and/or perpetuation of this condition.