Efficacy and Safety of Triptorelin 3-Month Formulation in Chinese Children with Central Precocious Puberty: A Phase 3, Open-Label, Single-Arm Study.
Luo. Xiaoping X; Zhang. Cai C; Yang. Yu Y; Xu. Xu X; Cheng. Xinran X; Wei. Haiyan H; Wang. Lanying L; Huang. Frank F; Shi. Xiaofeng X; Cabri. Patrick P
Key Findings
- 100% of participants had LH suppressed to pre‑pubertal levels after 3 months, staying around 93% at 6 and 12 months
- Growth velocity dropped from ~9 cm/yr to ~5‑8 cm/yr during treatment
- Bone age gap narrowed from 2.85 years to 2.39 years by month 12
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in hormone modulation, the 3‑month triptorelin depot works as well as the 1‑month version, meaning fewer injections. However, the data come from children with puberty issues, so adult safety and dosing are not established. Use this info cautiously if considering off‑label use for anti‑estrogen/anti‑androgen purposes.
Summary
A study in Chinese kids with early puberty showed that a 3‑month injectable form of the peptide triptorelin effectively lowered puberty hormones in almost all participants and was well tolerated, with growth speed slowing and bone age catching up to calendar age.
Abstract
Triptorelin is available as 1- and 3-month prolonged-release (PR) formulations; at the time of the study, only the former was approved for central precocious puberty (CPP) in China. This study assessed the efficacy and safety of the triptorelin 3-month PR formulation in Chinese children with CPP. In this 12-month, prospective, open-label, multicentre, single-arm study (NCT04736602), Chinese children (mean age [standard deviation (SD)], 7.6 ± 0.8 years) with CPP received triptorelin pamoate 15 mg on day 1 and at months 3, 6 and 9. The primary endpoint was the proportion with luteinizing hormone (LH) suppression (stimulated peak LH ≤ 3 IU/L after gonadotropin-releasing hormone [GnRH] stimulation) at month 3. Secondary endpoints included changes from baseline in hormone levels and clinical parameters, as well as safety assessments. Overall, 32 children were enrolled, including three boys. LH suppression to prepubertal levels (≤ 3 IU/L) after GnRH stimulation was observed in 100%, 93.5% and 93.5% of participants at months 3, 6 and 12, respectively. Basal and peak LH and follicle-stimulating hormone levels were substantially suppressed at months 3, 6 and 12, and most participants showed sex hormone suppression. At months 6 and 12 respectively 92.9% and 89.3% of girls had stable breast development, and all boys had stable genital development. There was a decrease in mean growth velocity from baseline (8.96 cm/year) to months 3, 6 and 12 (8.07, 5.24 and 6.94 cm/year, respectively). The mean difference between bone and chronological age decreased from baseline (2.85 years) to month 12 (2.39 years). In girls, uterine length was stable or reduced at month 12; in boys, testicular volume was reduced. Triptorelin was well tolerated. The triptorelin 3-month PR formulation demonstrated similar efficacy to that previously reported in non-Chinese patients with CPP and had an acceptable safety profile. This supports triptorelin 3-month PR as a viable option for Chinese children with CPP.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-08-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s12325-023-02617-8
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