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Tranexamic Acid (TA) vs Combined Oral Contraceptive (COCP) Pilot Study

Baylor College of Medicine logo

Baylor College of Medicine

Status

Completed

Conditions

Menorrhagia

Treatments

Drug: Oral Contraceptive Pills
Drug: Oral tranexamic acid

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01428713
H-27934 TA vs COCP Study

Details and patient eligibility

About

Menorrhagia, considered a public health challenge and reported by 5 to 10% of adult women, is encountered even more frequently in adolescents. Surveys of school students in the United States (US) and Europe reported menorrhagia in 37% to 55% of adolescent females. Medical management of adolescent menorrhagia includes various formulations of hormonal therapy and the antifibrinolytic agent epsilon aminocaproic acid. Oral tranexamic acid (TA), a more potent antifibrinolytic agent used as standard therapy for menorrhagia in adult women and in adolescent women in Europe and Canada, was not previously available in the US. Subsequent to US FDA approval in November 2009 of a novel oral TA formulation to treat cyclic heavy menstrual bleeding in adult women, this medication is currently included in the treatment armamentarium for adult menorrhagia. There is currently no preliminary data available in the US about the clinical use of oral TA in an exclusive adolescent population with menorrhagia. Oral contraceptive pills (OCP) are considered standard therapy in the management of menorrhagia in teen-aged women. Oral TA has been shown to be more efficacious than progesterone-only hormonal therapy for menorrhagia in adult women. However, there is no data available comparing the efficacy of oral TA and combined OCP (COCP) in adult women or in adolescents with menorrhagia.

The study hypothesis is that, in adolescent menorrhagia, oral TA will have comparable efficacy in reducing menstrual blood loss (MBL) and improving quality of life (QOL) when compared to the commonly prescribed COCP.

This hypothesis was tested by comparing the efficacy of these two medications, in a prospective randomized crossover trial in post-menarchal young girls with menorrhagia.

Full description

Subjects were randomized to one of two groups (group A or B).

Group A received oral tranexamic acid at 1300 mg (two 650mg tablets), three times each day on days 1 to 5 of menstrual cycle for 3 cycles.

Group B received combined oral contraceptive pills (OCP) with 3 weeks of hormonal pills and 1 week of placebo for 3 cycles.

After 3 cycles of therapy, both groups had one cycle without any therapy. Then, the groups crossed over. Group A, who first received TA, then received OCP. Group B, who first received OCP, then received TA.

All subjects were to receive both tranexamic acid and oral contraceptive pills.

There were a total of 3 study-associated visits per patient: 1 at baseline and 2 at the end of 3 cycles on each medication. These visits were considered within standard of care, as subjects with menorrhagia have frequent monitoring until the effectiveness of the treatment is determined.

At the study visits the following were done:

  1. Assessment of the last menstrual period (amount of blood lost) using the Pictorial Blood Assessment Chart (PBAC) score and the number of days the period lasted
  2. Quality of Life evaluation - by the patient completing a standardized pediatric quality of life (PedsQL) questionnaire
  3. Detailed history and physical examination to evaluate for drug side effects and to look for signs of blood clots.
  4. Blood drawn for a complete blood count.

Enrollment

17 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

Under 21 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Menstruating females with menorrhagia or menometrorrhagia referred to hematology or gynecology clinics at Texas Childrens Hospital. Menorrhagia is defined as regular periods with heavy menstrual bleeding with a PBAC score greater than 100; menometrorrhagia is heavy vaginal bleeding occurring at irregular intervals.
  2. PBAC Score greater than 100 for 2 consecutive cycles
  3. Pelvic ultrasound that excludes pelvic pathology that can cause menorrhagia within 12 months prior to study participation.
  4. Normal external genitalia examination within 6 months prior to study participation.
  5. Normal thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) in the last 6 months prior to study participation.
  6. Negative urine or serum pregnancy test within 4 weeks prior to study participation.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Presence of intra uterine device.
  2. Presence of a diagnosed bleeding disorder based on the standard work-up including complete blood count (CBC), prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, von Willebrand panel and platelet function analysis (PFA-100) or platelet aggregation.
  3. Intake of medications with increased risk of bleeding
  4. Taking herbal products.
  5. Sexually active status.
  6. Body weight less than 40 kg.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

17 participants in 2 patient groups

Group A-Oral tranexamic acid
Active Comparator group
Description:
Group A received oral tranexamic acid at 1300 mg (two 650mg tablets), three times each day on days 1 to 5 of menstrual cycle for 3 cycles.
Treatment:
Drug: Oral tranexamic acid
Group B-Combined oral contraceptive pills
Active Comparator group
Description:
Group B received combined oral contraceptive pills with 3 weeks of hormonal pills and 1 week of placebo for 3 cycles.
Treatment:
Drug: Oral Contraceptive Pills

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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