Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Triptorelin

Decapeptyl, Trelstar, Gonapeptyl, Pamorelin

Quick Stats
Studies 178
Trials 100
Score 2
2021 pubmed 3 citations

Is Anti-Müllerian Hormone a Marker of Ovarian Reserve in Young Breast Cancer Patients Receiving a GnRH Analog during Chemotherapy?

Torrisi. Rosalba R; Basilico. Vera V; Giordano. Laura L; Caruso. Michele M; Musolino. Antonino A; Monari. Marta Noemi MN; Carnaghi. Carlo C; Santoro. Armando A

Key Findings

  • AMH levels fell to almost undetectable levels during chemotherapy despite triptorelin use
  • One year after treatment, AMH recovered to roughly 10% of baseline on average
  • 48% of the women had AMH above 0.2 ng/mL after a year, a higher recovery rate than reported in studies without GnRHa

Practical Outcomes

  • Concurrent triptorelin may give a modest boost to ovarian reserve recovery after chemo, but it doesn’t fully protect fertility. For women seeking to preserve fertility during cancer treatment, it could be considered as part of a protocol, yet the evidence isn’t strong enough to recommend it universally. More data are needed before adopting it as a standard biohacking strategy.

Summary

In a small study of pre‑menopausal breast‑cancer patients, giving the hormone blocker triptorelin during chemo didn’t stop the sharp drop in the fertility marker AMH, but about half of the women had enough AMH back after a year to be above a low‑threshold level, which is better than what’s usually seen without the drug.

Abstract

Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is the most reliable biomarker of ovarian reserve; however, its role in predicting ovarian recovery after chemotherapy is unclear. Administration of a GnRH analog (GnRHa) during chemotherapy significantly reduces the ovarian failure rate and increases the pregnancy rate. The available data on the behavior of AMH during concurrent administration of chemotherapy and GnRHa are inconsistent. We investigated whether concurrent administration of triptorelin and adjuvant chemotherapy might reduce the expected drop of AMH. Eligible patients were premenopausal women aged <40 years, with a diagnosis of early breast cancer, and candidates to 4-8 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy. Triptorelin (3.75 mg i.m.) was started before chemotherapy and administered every 4 weeks thereafter. The principal endpoint was the proportion of patients with an AMH percent change ≤50% between 12 months after chemotherapy and basal levels. The secondary endpoint was the proportion of patients achieving postchemotherapy AMH levels above the threshold of 0.2 ng/mL. Fifty patients were enrolled, 31 of whom had blood samples available at baseline and 1 year after the end of chemotherapy. AMH decreased to nearly undetectable levels after chemotherapy and recovered after 12 months, but they did not exceed 1 tenth of the pretreatment levels. As for the secondary endpoint, 15 of the 31 patients recovered AMH levels above the threshold. This study did not reach its principal endpoint; however, the rate of 48% of patients who recovered AMH above threshold levels favorably compared with those in studies without concurrent GnRHa, supporting a better recovery of AMH with triptorelin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-03-04T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1159/000514445

Citations

3

References

26