Androgenic Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) creates physical/emotional burdens in 4-20% of premenopausal women living with PCOS (WLWP) including: few menstruations per year, subfertility, hirsutism/acne and low quality of life by validated PCOS Questionnaire (PCOSQ). Combined hormonal contraceptives (CHC), the current standard-of-care, improve PCOSQ only 16%; with stopping CHC, benefits disappear within 6-months. We hypothesize too-fast brain/luteinizing hormone (LH) pulses cause PCOS. Progesterone (P4) slows LH when testosterone (FreeT) is normal. Combining two approved medications, Cyclic P4 with anti-androgen, Spironolactone (Sp), will likely provide effective, durable benefits. WLWP lit-review suggested significant P4 7-14-day benefits. A 6-month prospective feasibility study of CyclicP4/Sp is necessary. Overall
Purpose
Perform a pilot study in 40 WLWP on Cyclic P4 (300 mg/bedtime, 14 days/month) plus Spironolactone (Sp, 200 mg/d). Feasibility: Assess longitudinal within-WLWP 6-month changes in: 1) PCOSQ; 2) FreeT, HbA1c, and LH; plus 3) WLWP's acceptance of CyclicP4/Sp.
Methods
Single-centre, prospective, longitudinal single cohort study. Recruit ~7-8 WLWP/month over 4-6 months; 85% retention. Eligible WLWP have physician-diagnosed PCOS, are 1-month off CHC/metformin, ages 19-35 (avoiding adolescence/perimenopause), HbA1c <6.4% (no diabetes) and commit to non-hormonal contraception, if needed. Recruitment uses online, internet, strategic ads and tear-tab posters. Measures at 0 and 6 months: as above plus K+ (safety assessment). Menstrual Cycle Diary monitoring (flow, adherence), 2 visits, monthly telephone/emails for support and assessment of any adverse effects. Statistical analysis: changes by paired T-test.
Summary: A feasibility 6-month study of CyclicP4/Sp will facilitate a CIHR-funded RCT of CHC versus this innovative and likely beneficial treatment for WLWP.
cyclic progesterone therapy for PCOS, spironolactone treatment polycystic ovary syndrome, cycle-timed progesterone PCOS, progesterone spironolactone combination therapy, hormonal support for PCOS, NaPro protocol for polycystic ovaries, phase II trial PCOS treatment, cyclic hormone therapy polycystic ovary, progesterone therapy ovulation, spironolactone and progesterone fertility, root cause PCOS treatment
Cite this article
Prior, J. C., Singer, J., Goshtasebi, A., Dahl, M., Shirin, S., Kalidasan, D., Murray, F., Yip, J., & Nelson, K. (2021). Phase II 6-month Cyclic Progesterone/Spironolactone pilot Therapy Trial in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome : pre-post, single-arm feasibility study. *Open Collections*. https://doi.org/10.14288/1.0396377
Prior JC, Singer J, Goshtasebi A, Dahl M, Shirin S, Kalidasan D, et al. Phase II 6-month Cyclic Progesterone/Spironolactone pilot Therapy Trial in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome : pre-post, single-arm feasibility study. Open Collections. 2021. doi:10.14288/1.0396377
Prior, J. C., et al. "Phase II 6-month Cyclic Progesterone/Spironolactone pilot Therapy Trial in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome : pre-post, single-arm feasibility study." *Open Collections*, 2021.
Nelson K et al., 2025
Open Access
Journal of the Endocrine Society
Disclosure: K. Nelson: None. J. Singer: None. A. Pederson: None. D. Kalidasan: None. J. Prior: None.
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