These results are significant because as research from one of the study’s lead authors, Karl Storbeck - a Newton Advanced Fellow at Birmingham in collaboration with his home University, Stellenbosch University in South Africa - has shown, some 11-oxygenated androgens are similarly powerful androgens as testosterone. Previous work by the Birmingham group had shown that the pattern of androgens in blood predicts the metabolic risk associated with PCOS, a condition now increasingly recognised as a metabolic disorder, with increased rates of obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure and cardiovascular disease.