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Levonorgestrel-impregnated intrauterine device as treatment for endometrial hyperplasia: a national multicentre randomised trial

✍ Scribed by Ørbo, A; Vereide, AB; Arnes, M; Pettersen, I; Straume, B


Book ID
125805043
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2013
Tongue
English
Weight
164 KB
Volume
121
Category
Article
ISSN
1470-0328

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✦ Synopsis


Objective

The purpose of this study was to investigate if the levonorgestrel-impregnated intrauterine device (LNG-IUS, Mirena®) is safe and effective as therapy for low-risk and medium-risk endometrial hyperplasia compared with oral medroxyprogesterone (MPA).

Design

A multicentre randomised trial.

Setting

Norway.

Population

In all, 170 women aged 30–70 years with low- or medium-risk endometrial hyperplasia who met inclusion criteria.

Methods

Patients were randomly assigned to one of three treatment arms: LNG-IUS; oral MPA 10 mg administered for 10 days per cycle, or continuous oral MPA 10 mg daily, for 6 months.

Main outcome measures

The primary outcome measure was normalisation or persisting hyperplasia.

Results

After 6 months all three treatment regimens showed significant effect when the outcome was evaluated as therapy response or not (P < 0.001). Responses were obtained for all the women in the LNG-IUS group (53/53, 95% CI 0.93–1.0) and for 96% of the women in the continuous oral group (46/48, 95% CI 0.86–0.99). Only 69% of the women in the cyclic oral group were responders (36/52, 95% CI 0.55–0.81). Adverse effects were relatively common with minimal differences between therapy groups.

Conclusion

In the first trial of its kind, women treated with the LNG-IUS showed histologically normal endometrium after 6 months of therapy for endometrial hyperplasia. Cyclical progestogens are found to be less effective compared with continuous oral therapy and LNG-IUS and should not be used for this purpose.


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