MON-LB9 Cyclic Progesterone Therapy in Androgenic Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) - Person-Related 6-Month Experience Changes

  • University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada ROR
  • Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre ROR

Journal of the Endocrine Society, 4(Supplement_1)

DOI 10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2332

Abstract

Endometrial cancer1 and oligomenorrhea2 are common risks for women living with androgenic PCOS (WLWP); cyclic progesterone therapy could prevent both. Cyclic oral micronized progesterone therapy (Cyclic OMP; 300 mg at hs/14 days/cycle) also corrects the neuroendocrine origins of PCOS3. Although vaginal progesterone is used in PCOS ovulation induction 4, and short Cyclic OMP decreases LH and/or Testosterone 5,6, no WLWP person-level prospective data with Cyclic OMP therapy are published.

A WLWP, aged 31, BMI 20.1, with heavy flow and slightly irregular ~35-day cycles, was unable to tolerate birth control pills. She was prescribed Cyclic OMP (300 mg/h.s. cycle days 14-27)7. She began keeping the Menstrual Cycle Diary© (Diary), a 19-item tool (scored 0-4), during her 1st Cyclic OMP cycle and took no other therapy. This pilot study was designed to understand Cyclic OMP-related experience changes in Wlwp: 1) by documenting experience changes on the 1st to the 6th complete Diary; and 2) by assessing follicular phase changes in baseline data (no Rx) vs. cycles 3 and 6. We entered data from six consecutive Diaries into an SPSS (Version 24) database. Analysis #1 used Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Tests (for within-person ordinal data) and #2 repeated measures ANOVA. Research question: What Cyclic OMP-related experience changes occurred for a WLWP? On Cyclic OMP, she spontaneously reported improvements in aching joints, sleep and GI problems. We assessed selected, potentially E2-related Diary changes: flow, fluid retention, breast tenderness, stretchy cervical mucus and anxiety. Cyclic OMP was associated with shorter cycle lengths of 28.17+/-0.8 days. Fluid retention (P=0.000), mucus (P=0.048), and breast tenderness (P=0.000) all decreased, but anxiety and flow were unchanged. Follicular phase only fluid retention significantly decreased (F (1.2, 14.7) = 6.7, P =0.017).

Although open-label, these prospective analyses suggest that Cyclic OMP, alone, is related to short-term benefits in androgenic PCOS. Prospective studies and controlled comparative trials of this innovative “luteal phase replacement” PCOS therapy are needed. Reference:1Barry J Hum Reprod Update 2014 20:748. 2Azziz R Nat Rev Dis Primers 2016;2:16057. 3Blank S Hum Reprod Update 2006;12:351. 4Montville C Fertil Steril 2010;94:678. 5Livadas S Fertil Steril 2010;94:242. 6Bagis T J Clin Endocr Met 2002;87:4536. 7Prior J https://hellocluecom/articles/cycle-a-z/the-case-for-a-new-pcos-therapy 2018

Topics

Prior JC cyclic progesterone therapy PCOS androgenic, oral micronized progesterone 300 mg PCOS luteal phase replacement, PCOS oligomenorrhea cyclic progesterone cycle regularity, menstrual cycle diary PCOS progesterone prospective case study, cyclic progesterone fluid retention breast tenderness PCOS, progesterone therapy PCOS neuroendocrine GnRH LH pulsatility, PCOS endometrial cancer prevention progesterone withdrawal bleeding, luteal phase replacement therapy androgenic PCOS pilot study, oral micronized progesterone cycle length normalization PCOS, PCOS patient-reported outcomes progesterone menstrual experiences
DOI 10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2332 10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2332

Cite this article

Shirin, S., Murray, F., Hajjaran, M., Goshtasebi, A., Kalidasan, D., & Prior, J. C. (2020). MON-LB9 Cyclic Progesterone Therapy in Androgenic Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) - Person-Related 6-Month Experience Changes. *Journal of the Endocrine Society*, *4*(Supplement_1). https://doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2332

Related articles