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Triptorelin

Decapeptyl, Trelstar, Gonapeptyl, Pamorelin

Quick Stats
Studies 178
Trials 100
Score 2
2021 pubmed 23 citations

Ovarian Function Suppression With Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone Agonists for the Treatment of Hormone Receptor-Positive Early Breast Cancer in Premenopausal Women.

Lu. Yen-Shen YS; Wong. Andrea A; Kim. Hee-Jeong HJ

Key Findings

  • LHRH agonists such as triptorelin suppress estrogen by stopping the pituitary from releasing LH and FSH.
  • Adding LHRHa to tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors improves survival compared with tamoxifen alone in some pre‑menopausal breast‑cancer patients.
  • LHRHa can be combined with chemotherapy to preserve ovarian function and fertility, but side‑effects and adherence need careful management.

Practical Outcomes

  • For the biohacker community, the data shows that triptorelin is effective for medically supervised estrogen suppression in cancer therapy, not as a general anti‑aging or performance tool. Use only under a doctor’s guidance, as dosing, safety, and long‑term effects are specific to cancer patients.

Summary

This review explains that drugs like triptorelin, which turn off the ovaries, can boost the effectiveness of breast‑cancer hormone treatments in pre‑menopausal women and may help protect fertility during chemo, but the evidence is limited to cancer patients, not healthy people.

Abstract

Chemotherapy and endocrine therapies are mainstays of treatment for early and advanced hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancer. In premenopausal women with HR+ tumors, the benefits of adding ovarian function suppression (OFS) to endocrine therapy have been debated. Consequently, for many years, tamoxifen monotherapy has been the standard of care for endocrine treatment in the adjuvant setting. Recent studies have, however, provided new evidence that, in some premenopausal patients, OFS in combination with tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AIs) can significantly increase survival <i>versus</i> tamoxifen alone. Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists (LHRHa), including goserelin, triptorelin, and leuprorelin, achieve OFS through sustained suppression of the release of follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone from the pituitary. In turn, this suppresses production and secretion of estradiol, an ovarian hormone that supports cancer cell growth, survival, and proliferation. In this review, we discuss the clinical evidence supporting the addition of LHRHa to adjuvant endocrine therapies, including tamoxifen and AIs, for premenopausal women with breast cancer. We also discuss the role of LHRHa use in combination with adjuvant chemotherapy to preserve ovarian function and fertility in young patients with breast cancer. Finally, we discuss important practical aspects of the use of LHRHa in breast cancer treatment, including side-effects, patient adherence to treatment, and the use of slow-release, long-acting drug formulations.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-09-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3389/fonc.2021.700722

Citations

23

References

93