But the study, supervised by Professors Wiebke Arlt and Jeremy Tomlinson at the University of Birmingham’s Centre for Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism (CEDAM), also found that androstenedione – a hormone which a precursor to testosterone - is elevated in more situations than testosterone, and correlates better with insulin resistance. This provides clinicians with a more robust test for diabetes risk in PCOS sufferers, as androstenedione is much easier to detect in female serum than testosterone.