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Effects of the selective progesterone receptor modulator asoprisnil on uterine artery blood flow, ovarian activity, and clinical symptoms in patients with uterine leiomyomata scheduled for hysterectomy

Effects of the selective progesterone receptor modulator asoprisnil on uterine artery blood flow, ovarian activity, and clinical symptoms in patients with uterine leiomyomata scheduled for hysterectomy
Effects of the selective progesterone receptor modulator asoprisnil on uterine artery blood flow, ovarian activity, and clinical symptoms in patients with uterine leiomyomata scheduled for hysterectomy
Introduction: Asoprisnil, a novel orally active selective progesterone receptor modulator, is being studied for the management of symptomatic uterine leiomyomata. The exact mechanism of action is not yet discerned. The primary objectives of this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study included evaluation of the effect of asoprisnil on uterine artery blood flow. Furthermore, we assessed effects of asoprisnil on leiomyoma symptoms.

Patients and Methods: Thirty-three premenopausal patients scheduled for hysterectomy due to symptomatic uterine leiomyomata were recruited in four centers and treated with 10 or 25 mg asoprisnil or placebo for 12 wk before surgery. At baseline and before hysterectomy, all patients underwent sonographic assessment to measure impedance to uterine artery blood flow, determined by resistance index and pulsatility index, as well as volumes of largest leiomyoma and uterus. In addition, patients recorded intensity and frequency of menstrual bleeding on a menstrual pictogram. Each asoprisnil treatment was compared with placebo.

Results: The increased pulsatility index in both asoprisnil groups and the statistically significantly increased resistance index within the 25-mg asoprisnil group suggest a moderately decreased uterine artery blood flow. Analysis of menstrual pictogram scores showed a statistically significant larger decrease in frequency and intensity of bleeding for both asoprisnil groups compared with placebo. Bleeding was suppressed by asoprisnil 25mg in 91% of patients. Asoprisnil treatment was well tolerated when administered daily for a 12-wk period, and no serious adverse events occurred.

Conclusion: Asoprisnil moderately reduced uterine artery blood flow. This effect may contribute in part to the clinical effects of asoprisnil.
double blind, apoptosis, methods, management, therapy, trial, blood flow, hypothesis, surgery, low dose mifepristone, uterus, activity, premenopausal women, doppler measurements, analysis, intraobserver reproducibility, symptoms, blood, england, fibroids
0021-972X
4664-4671
Wilkens, Julia
f1750da0-b231-4bba-a9bc-ac472474a847
Chwalisz, Kristof
5519bba0-d840-4e1a-9ef4-3ebe0236cbeb
Han, Cong
a6110943-9067-40e3-aa50-18d60a8749df
Walker, Jane
fd514b7f-9f67-424c-a56a-e1751feccce9
Cameron, Iain T.
f7595539-efa6-4687-b161-e1e93ff710f2
Ingamells, Susan
8d491be5-b202-4af2-8c7b-69e6f6729e37
Lawrence, Alexandra C.
fdd7daea-595b-4c94-9b96-629428bbc349
Lumsden, Mary Ann
b7603a31-97fa-478a-bb48-d47193455d0a
Hapangama, Dharani
3bf1c3bb-29c9-4682-829d-cc03a826eee6
Williams, Alistair R.W.
e7172269-5336-405d-a0cc-c515490085a5
Critchley, Hilary O.D.
ed3b135e-e838-4f69-ac78-22221c061f9d
Wilkens, Julia
f1750da0-b231-4bba-a9bc-ac472474a847
Chwalisz, Kristof
5519bba0-d840-4e1a-9ef4-3ebe0236cbeb
Han, Cong
a6110943-9067-40e3-aa50-18d60a8749df
Walker, Jane
fd514b7f-9f67-424c-a56a-e1751feccce9
Cameron, Iain T.
f7595539-efa6-4687-b161-e1e93ff710f2
Ingamells, Susan
8d491be5-b202-4af2-8c7b-69e6f6729e37
Lawrence, Alexandra C.
fdd7daea-595b-4c94-9b96-629428bbc349
Lumsden, Mary Ann
b7603a31-97fa-478a-bb48-d47193455d0a
Hapangama, Dharani
3bf1c3bb-29c9-4682-829d-cc03a826eee6
Williams, Alistair R.W.
e7172269-5336-405d-a0cc-c515490085a5
Critchley, Hilary O.D.
ed3b135e-e838-4f69-ac78-22221c061f9d

Wilkens, Julia, Chwalisz, Kristof, Han, Cong, Walker, Jane, Cameron, Iain T., Ingamells, Susan, Lawrence, Alexandra C., Lumsden, Mary Ann, Hapangama, Dharani, Williams, Alistair R.W. and Critchley, Hilary O.D. (2008) Effects of the selective progesterone receptor modulator asoprisnil on uterine artery blood flow, ovarian activity, and clinical symptoms in patients with uterine leiomyomata scheduled for hysterectomy. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 93 (12), 4664-4671. (doi:10.1210/jc.2008-1104). (PMID:18765509)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Asoprisnil, a novel orally active selective progesterone receptor modulator, is being studied for the management of symptomatic uterine leiomyomata. The exact mechanism of action is not yet discerned. The primary objectives of this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study included evaluation of the effect of asoprisnil on uterine artery blood flow. Furthermore, we assessed effects of asoprisnil on leiomyoma symptoms.

Patients and Methods: Thirty-three premenopausal patients scheduled for hysterectomy due to symptomatic uterine leiomyomata were recruited in four centers and treated with 10 or 25 mg asoprisnil or placebo for 12 wk before surgery. At baseline and before hysterectomy, all patients underwent sonographic assessment to measure impedance to uterine artery blood flow, determined by resistance index and pulsatility index, as well as volumes of largest leiomyoma and uterus. In addition, patients recorded intensity and frequency of menstrual bleeding on a menstrual pictogram. Each asoprisnil treatment was compared with placebo.

Results: The increased pulsatility index in both asoprisnil groups and the statistically significantly increased resistance index within the 25-mg asoprisnil group suggest a moderately decreased uterine artery blood flow. Analysis of menstrual pictogram scores showed a statistically significant larger decrease in frequency and intensity of bleeding for both asoprisnil groups compared with placebo. Bleeding was suppressed by asoprisnil 25mg in 91% of patients. Asoprisnil treatment was well tolerated when administered daily for a 12-wk period, and no serious adverse events occurred.

Conclusion: Asoprisnil moderately reduced uterine artery blood flow. This effect may contribute in part to the clinical effects of asoprisnil.

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More information

Published date: December 2008
Keywords: double blind, apoptosis, methods, management, therapy, trial, blood flow, hypothesis, surgery, low dose mifepristone, uterus, activity, premenopausal women, doppler measurements, analysis, intraobserver reproducibility, symptoms, blood, england, fibroids
Organisations: Dev Origins of Health & Disease

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 70580
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/70580
ISSN: 0021-972X
PURE UUID: 9f2fa0a2-3798-4d0b-9d90-0260650f7cf8
ORCID for Iain T. Cameron: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4875-267X

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:42

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Contributors

Author: Julia Wilkens
Author: Kristof Chwalisz
Author: Cong Han
Author: Jane Walker
Author: Iain T. Cameron ORCID iD
Author: Susan Ingamells
Author: Alexandra C. Lawrence
Author: Mary Ann Lumsden
Author: Dharani Hapangama
Author: Alistair R.W. Williams
Author: Hilary O.D. Critchley

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