The Protective Effect of GnRH Agonist Triptorelin on the Histomorphometric Parameters of the Utero-ovarian Tissue in the Doxorubicin- and Cyclophosphamide-treated Mice.
Bahmanpour. Soghra S; Ameri. Negin N; Zareifard. Nehleh N; Karimi. Fatemeh F
Key Findings
- Triptorelin increased primordial and pre‑antral follicle counts and granulosa cells in chemo‑treated mice
- Triptorelin reduced the number of atretic (dying) follicles compared to chemo‑only groups
- Triptorelin improved overall ovarian and uterine tissue volumes, including endometrium and blood vessels
Practical Outcomes
- For people facing chemotherapy, using a GnRH agonist like triptorelin could help preserve fertility, but the evidence is currently limited to animal studies. More human trials are needed before it can be recommended as a routine protective protocol.
Summary
In mice, giving the hormone drug triptorelin before or after chemotherapy helped keep the ovaries and uterus healthier. It boosted the number of early‑stage egg follicles, cut down dying follicles, and kept the size of ovarian and uterine tissues normal, showing it can protect reproductive organs from chemo damage.
Abstract
One of the common side effects of chemotherapy drugs is ovarian failure and uterine dysfunction, which can occur after the administration of doxorubicin and/or cyclophosphamide. In clinics, gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists (GnRHa) are used to modulate the toxic effect of chemotherapy and intercept infertility with some controversy and limited histological knowledge. This study aimed to evaluate the serological and histological features of protective effects of triptorelin, (GnRHa), on utero-ovarian tissue in the mice treated with cyclophosphamide and/or doxorubicin. Forty-eight female BALB/c mice were randomly divided into 8 groups as follows: Group I: normal saline; Group II: triptorelin; Group III: cyclophosphamide; Group IV: doxorubicin; Group V: cyclophosphamide + doxorubicin; and Groups VI, VII, and VIII: after injection of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, or cyclophosphamide + doxorubicin, administration of triptorelin (1 mg/kg; intraperitoneally) for 15 consecutive days, respectively. On the 21st day, the ovaries and uterine horns were dissected and weighed. Then, tissue processing and staining were performed for further histological and stereological studies. Triptorelin treatment in the damaged groups significantly increased the number of primordial and pre-antral follicles and granulosa cells. It decreased the number of atretic follicles compared to cyclophosphamide and/or doxorubicin-treated groups (P < 0.05). Triptorelin also significantly improved the volume of the ovary, cortex, medulla, oocytes in the primordial and antral follicles, uterus, endometrium, myometrium, uterine glands, and endometrial blood vessels in the damaged groups (P < 0.05). Triptorelin treatment prevents the destructive effects of cyclophosphamide and/or doxorubicin on utero-ovarian tissue.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-09-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s12013-024-01487-3
60