Hyperandrogenemia and Altered Day-night LH Pulse Patterns

Last updated: November 1, 2023
Sponsor: University of Virginia
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

1

Condition

Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

Testotoxikose

Reproductive Health

Treatment

Spironolactone

Micronized progesterone

Placebo

Clinical Study ID

NCT03068910
18489
P50HD028934
  • Ages 10-17
  • Female
  • Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Study Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine if, in mid- to late pubertal girls with hyperandrogenism, androgen-receptor blockade (spironolactone) improves the ability of progesterone to acutely reduce waking luteinizing hormone pulse frequency (primary endpoint).

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Mid- to late pubertal adolescent girl (at least Tanner breast stage 3, but no morethan 2 years postmenarcheal)
  • Hyperandrogenism, defined as a serum (calculated) free testosterone concentrationgreater than the Tanner stage-specific reference range and/or unequivocal evidence forhirsutism
  • General good health (excepting overweight, obesity, hyperandrogenism, andadequately-treated hypothyroidism)
  • Capable of and willing to provide informed assent (adolescents under age 16 years)and/or consent (adolescents over age 16 years; custodial parents or guardians of alladolescent volunteers)
  • Willing to strictly avoid pregnancy with use of reliable non-hormonal methods duringthe study period

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Inability/incapacity to provide informed consent
  • Males will be excluded (hyperandrogenism is unique to females)
  • Obesity resulting from a well-defined endocrinopathy or genetic syndrome
  • Positive pregnancy test or current lactation
  • Evidence for non-physiologic or non-PCOS causes of hyperandrogenism and/or anovulation
  • Evidence of virilization (e.g., rapidly progressive hirsutism, deepening of the voice,clitoromegaly)
  • Total testosterone > 150 ng/dl, which suggests the possibility of virilizing ovarianor adrenal tumor
  • DHEA-S elevation > 1.5 times the upper reference range limit. Mild elevations may beseen in adolescent HA and in PCOS, and will be accepted in these groups.
  • Early morning 17-hydroxyprogesterone > 200 ng/dl measured in the follicular phase,which suggests the possibility of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (if elevated duringthe luteal phase, the 17-hydroxyprogesterone will be repeated during the follicularphase). NOTE: If a 17-hydroxyprogesterone > 200 ng/dl is confirmed on repeat testing,an ACTH stimulated 17-hydroxyprogesterone < 1000 ng/dl will be required for studyparticipation.
  • Abnormal thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH): Note that subjects with stable andadequately treated primary hypothyroidism, reflected by normal TSH values, will not beexcluded.
  • Hyperprolactinemia > 20% higher than the upper limit of normal. Mild prolactinelevations may be seen in adolescents and women with HA/PCOS, and elevations within 20% higher than the upper limit of normal will be accepted in this group.
  • History and/or physical exam findings suggestive of Cushing's syndrome, adrenalinsufficiency, or acromegaly
  • History and/or physical exam findings suggestive of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (e.g., symptoms of estrogen deficiency) including functional hypothalamic amenorrhea (which may be suggested by a constellation of symptoms including restrictive eatingpatterns, excessive exercise, psychological stress, etc.)
  • Persistent hematocrit < 36% and hemoglobin < 12 g/dl.
  • Severe thrombocytopenia (platelets < 50,000 cells/microliter) or leukopenia (totalwhite blood count < 4,000 cells/microliter)
  • Previous diagnosis of diabetes, fasting glucose > or = 126 mg/dl, or a hemoglobin A1c > or = 6.5%
  • Persistent liver panel abnormalities, with two exceptions. Mild bilirubin elevationswill be accepted in the setting of known Gilbert's syndrome. Also, mild transaminaseelevations may be seen in obesity/HA/PCOS; therefore, elevations < 1.5 times the upperlimit of normal will be accepted in this group.
  • Significant history of cardiac or pulmonary dysfunction (e.g., known or suspectedcongestive heart failure, asthma requiring intermittent systemic corticosteroids,etc.)
  • Decreased renal function evidenced by GFR < 60 ml/min/1.73m2
  • A personal history of breast, ovarian, or endometrial cancer
  • History of any other cancer diagnosis and/or treatment (with the exception of basalcell or squamous cell skin carcinoma) unless they have remained clinically diseasefree (based on appropriate surveillance) for five years
  • History of allergy to micronized progesterone or spironolactone
  • Body mass index (BMI)-for-age percentile < 5% (underweight)
  • Due to the amount of blood being drawn, adolescent volunteers with body weight < 25 kgwill be excluded.
  • Restrictions on use of other drugs or treatments: No medications known to affect thereproductive system, glucose metabolism, lipid metabolism, or blood pressure can betaken in the 2 months prior to the screening visit and in the 3 months prior to thestart of the study medications. Such medications include oral contraceptive pills,progestins, metformin, systemic glucocorticoids, some antipsychotic medications, andsympathomimetics/stimulants (e.g., methylphenidate).

Study Design

Total Participants: 32
Treatment Group(s): 3
Primary Treatment: Spironolactone
Phase: 1
Study Start date:
July 21, 2016
Estimated Completion Date:
December 31, 2025

Study Description

This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded crossover study to test the following hypothesis: In mid- to late pubertal girls with hyperandrogenism (HA), acute progesterone suppression of waking LH pulse frequency is greater after 2 weeks of spironolactone pretreatment compared to after 2 weeks of placebo pretreatment. We will only study mid- to late pubertal girls with HA (i.e., girls who would be candidates for therapeutic spironolactone use). Subjects will complete two 18-hour Clinical Research Unit (CRU) admissions in separate menstrual cycles. Subjects will be randomized to be pretreated for 2 weeks with either oral spironolactone (50 mg twice daily) or placebo prior to the first CRU admission. Immediately before and during each CRU admission, oral micronized progesterone (0.8 mg/kg/dose) will be given at 0700, 1500, 2300, and 0700 h. During each CRU admission, blood will be obtained every 10 minutes through an indwelling iv catheter from 1800 to 1200 h. This will allow full characterization of pulsatile LH secretion in addition to other hormone measurements. Formal polysomnography will be performed during CRU admissions. A second CRU admission (performed at least 2 months later given blood withdrawal limits) will be identical to the first except that placebo pretreatment will exchanged for spironolactone pretreatment or vice versa (treatment crossover). The primary endpoint is LH pulse frequency while awake. (LH pulse frequency while asleep is an important secondary endpoint.) The wake LH pulse frequency data from the spironolactone and placebo admissions will be analyzed via a hierarchical linear mixed model (HLMM). The admission (spironolactone vs. placebo) will represent the fixed effect factor of the HLMM. Random effects will be utilized to account for the hierarchical variance-covariance structure of the two-period cross-over design. Wake LH pulse frequency in response to exogenous progesterone will be compared between the spironolactone admission and the placebo admission via a linear contrast of the HLMM least squares LH pulse frequency means. A similar analysis will be performed for sleep-related LH pulse frequency. Using published and preliminary data, we determined that, if 16 mid- to late pubertal girls with HA complete both admissions, we should have at least an 80% chance of detecting a 0.35 pulse/hour mean within-subject difference in wake LH pulse frequency between the spironolactone and placebo admissions with a two-sided false positive rejection rate of no more than 0.05.

Connect with a study center

  • University of Virginia Clinical Research Unit

    Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

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