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Hum. Reprod. Advance Access published online on June 30, 2004

Human Reproduction, doi:10.1093/humrep/deh329
© 2004 by European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology
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Received March 8, 2004
Accepted April 30, 2004

Article

Flutamide-metformin plus an oral contraceptive (OC) for young women with polycystic ovary syndrome: switch from third- to fourth-generation OC reduces body adiposity

Lourdes Ibáñez 1* Francis de Zegher 2

1 Endocrinology Unit, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, University of Barcelona, Spain
2 Department of Pediatrics, University of Leuven, Belgium

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: libanez{at}hsjdbcn.org.


   Abstract

BACKGROUND: Low-dose flutamide-metformin has been developed as a background therapy for non-obese adolescents and young women with hyperinsulinaemic hyperandrogenism, a variant of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). We verified whether the lipolytic efficacy of flutamide-metformin in women with PCOS is enhanced by giving an oral contraceptive (OC) co-therapy that contains drospirenone, instead of gestodene, as progestin. METHODS: An open-labelled study was carried out in which non-obese women with PCOS (n=29; age ~20 years), who had been on a combination of flutamide (62.5 mg/day), metformin (850 mg/day) and ethinylestradiol-gestodene for 8-15 months, were randomized for replacement of the gestodene OC by a drospirenone OC. Assessments of endocrine-metabolic state and body composition (by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) were performed at randomization and after 6 months. RESULTS: The switch to drospirenone OC was accompanied by a reduction of total and abdominal fat (mean -0.8 and -0.5 kg) and by an increment of lean body mass (+0.6 kg; all P<0.01), so that body adiposity was strikingly reduced without changing body weight. CONCLUSION: In non-obese women with PCOS, low-dose flutamide-metformin reduces total and abdominal fat excess more effectively if contraceptive co-therapy contains drospirenone, instead of gestodene, as progestin.

Keywords: abdominal fat mass; drospirenone; flutamide; metformin; PCOS.
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