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Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT05568940

Evaluating Tibolone Add-back in Patients With Endometriosis and Fibroids

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

While there are many medical options for managing endometriosis and fibroids, GnRH-agonist (GnRH-a) therapy remains a very common method of treating these complex conditions. Although this therapy is effective, it does come with significant menopausal side effects, such as hot flashes, sweating, mood changes, sleep disturbance, altered sex drive, decreased bone density, and vaginal and urinary symptoms. In short, chemically-induced menopause (menopause triggered by GnRH-a injection) causes the same symptoms of natural menopause, but with a sudden onset in a generally young and active population. Low dose hormone add-back therapy is commonly used to lessen these side effects of GnRH-a use. There are many menopausal hormone therapies (MHTs) used in menopausal women that can help, but few studies have directly evaluated the different options of treatment for women undergoing chemically-induced menopause. Tibolone is a menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) that stands out as a good option in the management of medical menopause in endometriosis patients because it may give fewer side effects than other alternatives and have a positive effect on mood and libido. This study aims to see how effective Tibolone is as an add-back therapy in women who are hormonally suppressed with a GnRH-a. For this study, we will recruit pre-menopausal women over the age of 18 years old undergoing therapy with the GnRH-a Lupron.

Detailed description

Endometriosis is a common condition affecting approximately one in ten women, with significant adverse effects on women's quality of life and reproductive health. While there are numerous medical options for managing pain symptoms and reducing lesion size, GnRH-a therapy remains a mainstay of treating this complex condition. Similarly, uterine fibroids can cause heavy bleeding with associated anemia, and bulk symptoms, which may require surgical management. These hormone-sensitive fibroids regress and bleeding subsides when treatment with GnRH-a is used. This generally young and otherwise healthy population undergoes suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis in order to manage symptoms of either endometriosis or fibroids, or both if present concomitantly. The efficacy of GnRH-a therapy has been extensively demonstrated in the literature albeit at the cost of significant menopausal side effects such as vasomotor symptoms, mood changes, sleep disturbance, altered libido, decreased bone mineral density, and genitourinary symptoms. In short, chemically-induced menopause confers the validated symptoms of natural menopause, but with an abrupt onset in a generally young and active population. Add-back therapy with low-dose hormonal preparations is commonly used to mitigate the unwanted but largely inevitable adverse effects of GnRH-a use. Theoretically, any menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) used in menopausal women could serve the purpose, however few studies have evaluated directly the differing options in this unique population. One MHT preparation that stands out as a valuable option in the management of medical menopause in endometriosis patients is Tibolone. Tibolone is a synthetic steroid prodrug with active metabolites that exhibit estrogenic, progestogenic, and androgenic activity. Prior studies have demonstrated that add-back treatment with Tibolone significantly reduces bone mineral density loss and vasomotor symptoms that normally occur with GnRH-a treatment. In addition, Tibolone has been shown to cause significantly fewer bleeding and spotting episodes and less breast tenderness than combined hormone replacement therapy (HRT) preparations, and has also been shown to improve mood and libido in menopausal women, making it a unique and attractive option in younger women undergoing temporary, chemical menopause. This is a prospective open-label observational cohort study. Pre-menopausal women over 18 years of age with known or suspected endometriosis or uterine fibroids who will be undergoing treatment with an injectable GnRH-agonist (leuprolide acetate) at the Royal Victoria Hospital (Glen site) will be recruited and screened for exclusion criteria. Consenting participants of the study will receive a phone call before their GnRH-a treatment to report menopausal symptoms and endometriosis symptoms in a baseline evaluation. After their GnRH-a treatment, participants will be contacted, by phone call, one, two and three months post treatment to be asked a standardized set of questions to evaluate relief of menopausal symptoms, control of endometriosis symptoms, as well as adherence to treatment, and side-effects. Add-back will commence one month after the initial injection of GnRH-a, such that the incidence of vasomotor symptoms and other side-effects of GnRH-a may be observed. In this way, this is a crossover study by design in which patients will serve as their own controls, before and after initiating add-back therapy with Tibolone. Participants will always reserve the right to commence Tibolone sooner than 1 month if they experience bothersome side-effects.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTibolone 2.5 Mg Oral TabletTibolone oral therapy for 2-3 months: All participants will take a Tibolone 2.5 mg tablet orally daily, at the same time each day, following a scheduled, luteal-phase injection of leuprolide acetate 11.25mg intramuscular (IM).

Timeline

Start date
2024-09-01
Primary completion
2026-04-01
Completion
2026-04-01
First posted
2022-10-06
Last updated
2024-05-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05568940. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.