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About
Turner syndrome is a condition in which a girl's body does not make enough estrogen on its own, so doctors give estrogen to help start breast and uterine (womb) development. Hence, the goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether two different ways of giving estrogen help girls and young women with Turner syndrome go through puberty normally, and to compare how well each method works and how safe they are.
The main questions the trial aims to answer are:
Who can take part?
What will happen to the participants during the clinical trial?
Get assigned at random to one of two groups (1:1 ratio):
Visit the clinic at the start of study (baseline), month 1, 7, 13, and 19 for:
Why does this matter?
Girls and young women with Turner syndrome often need estrogen to begin puberty safely. This trial will show which method-gel or tablets-best mimics natural puberty (breast and uterine growth), how quickly menstrual-like bleeding begins, and which has fewer unwanted effects. The findings will help doctors choose the most effective and safe treatment for people with Turner syndrome.
Full description
Turner syndrome (TS) is a chromosomal condition in which the loss of one X chromosome leads to ovarian failure, absent or delayed natural puberty, reduced bone density, and elevated cardiovascular and metabolic risk. This interventional, Bayesian Phase II pragmatic trial is being undertaken within the TRIFECTA-DARED framework to address a critical gap in the management of pubertal induction for adolescent and young adult females with TS. While estrogen replacement therapies are standard, there remains uncertainty about which regimen best approximates natural pubertal development, optimizes uterine growth, and minimizes adverse metabolic or thromboembolic risks. Our trial arises from the need for robust, locally generated evidence in Malaysia to inform clinical practice in this rare-disease context.
This single-centre study, conducted at Hospital Canselor Tuanku Muhriz (HCTM) and Hospital Pakar Kanak-Kanak at the Cheras Campus of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, received ethics approval from the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Research Ethics Committee (UKMREC). The trial design uses an open-label, randomized,1:1 ratio design, augmented by matched historical control data. After providing informed consent, participants are allocated by a central, computer-generated sequence (stratified by age category and body mass index) to receive either oral estradiol valerate (Progynova) or transdermal 17β-estradiol gel (Oestrogel). Treating clinicians and participants remain unblinded, while the trial statistician is masked until the database lock.
Both regimens begin with twice-weekly dosing for the first four weeks, followed by once-daily administration for the remaining 18 months. Incremental dose doubling at month 7 and again at month 13 is designed to mimic the gradual rise in endogenous estradiol characteristic of normal puberty. Doses are dispensed and tracked through an electronic case report form (eCRF) with real-time logging of medication issuance and returns, and participants maintain a daily diary to record dosing adherence, any spotting or bleeding episodes, and all adverse experiences.
Scheduled study visits occur at baseline and at months 7, 13, and 19, with quarterly safety check-ins during the first year. At each visit, a pediatric or adolescent gynecologist performs a comprehensive physical examination-including growth measurements, vital signs, and breast development staging-and obtains a transabdominal ultrasound to document uterine dimensions. Blood samples are drawn for routine safety laboratories (liver function, lipid profile, complete blood count) and hormone assays.
Safety oversight is provided by an independent Data Monitoring Committee (DMC), which reviews periodic safety reports prepared by an external statistician. Adverse events are graded per the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 5.0. Any life-threatening or disabling event associated with the study drug triggers immediate notification to the ethics committee and regulatory authorities within 24 hours; other Grade 3 or higher events are reported within five business days. Prespecified halting criteria include unexplained severe laboratory abnormalities, life-threatening reactions deemed drug-related, or anaphylactic-type responses within 24 hours of dosing.
All data are captured in a secure REDCap eCRF with built-in validation and audit trails. Concomitant medications are coded using the World Health Organization Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (WHO-ATC ) classification system, and adverse events use MedDRA terminology. The database is backed up daily across multiple secure servers and locked after each monitoring visit. Quality assurance involves internal audits every six months by the sponsor, all in accordance with Good Clinical Practice (GCP) standards.
Data analysis follows an intention-to-treat framework with multiple imputation for missing values and sensitivity checks in a per-protocol subset. Although specific outcome measures are recorded elsewhere, continuous and categorical data will be analyzed using appropriate statistical models. In addition, Bayesian hierarchical modelling will be carried out to incorporate informative priors derived from matched historical TS cohorts, yielding posterior estimates of treatment effects and enabling predictive checks, thus providing robust inference despite the small sample inherent to this rare-disease study.
The trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov and the Malaysian National Medical Research Registry. Aggregate results will be posted within six months of study completion and disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and conference presentations following International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) authorship guidelines.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Patients with signs of spontaneous puberty
Contraindications to trial products (e.g hypersensitivity to any components of the HRT) based on the most recent version of the British National Formulary (BNF 85)
Previous history of exposure to estrogen treatment.
Concomitant use of other drugs that affect the bone mineral density (BMD) of the participants (e.g. Bisphosphonates or prolonged use of systemic corticosteroids). Vitamin D supplementation and short corticosteroid usage are allowed.
Acute or chronic hepatic disease
Patients with untreated hypothyroidism
Inflammatory bowel disease (Ulcerative Colitis, Crohn's disease) and coeliac disease
Cigarette-smoking patients
Severely obese patients based on the following criteria:
Unknown abnormal genital bleeding
Porphyria
Recent involvement with clinical research studies (previous 6 months) investigating new HRT formulations
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
24 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
ANI AMELIA ZAINUDDIN, MBBS, PhD; MUHAMMAD IRFAN ABDUL JALAL, MBChB BAO, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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