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Abstract
Women living with androgenic PCOS (WLWP) experience unpredictable oligomenorrhea1 and are at increased risk for endometrial cancer2. Oral micronized progesterone (OMP) given cyclically (14 days/cycle or 4 weeks, Cyclic OMP), in luteal phase doses3 (300 mg at bedtime) as a “luteal phase replacement” therapy would be likely to effectively treat both. In addition, evidence suggests PCOS is causally related to rapid pulsing of GnRH and LH 4; OMP normalizes LH pulsatility if androgen levels are not elevated 4. Previous searches did not find progesterone therapy for PCOS 5. Our research question: Does the peer-reviewed literature provide evidence for prescribing cyclic progesterone therapy in PCOS? Literature search methods used Medline (Ovid) and PubMed for published articles. Our search terms were: “polycystic ovary syndrome”, “androgenic PCOS”, and, “micronized progesterone.” We sought publications with eligible women participants having androgenic PCOS, drug exposures (cyclic
OMP, vaginal progesterone, and in varying doses and durations) and specific outcomes (biochemical or patient-reported data or both) in all languages. We excluded reviews and practice guidelines but searched bibliographies for missed citations. Results discovered 18 articles in combined Medline (n=6) and PubMed (12) searches. After excluding duplicates, articles on estradiol (E2) alone E2 with OMP therapy, five eligible articles remained. We read all in full detail.
Progesterone therapy was beneficial for WLWP as, even in sub-therapeutic doses (<300 mg at bedtime) and in cycles of too short durations (
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MON-LB010 Cyclic Progesterone Therapy for Androgenic Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) - A Systematic Review of the Literature
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