Vulvovaginal atrophy (VVA) is a condition characterized by vaginal dryness, itching, burning, irritation and dyspareunia. The condition is mainly due to estrogen deficiency and is common during and after menopause. Furthermore, androgens may have an important function in these symptoms. The purpose of the study is to compare vaginal estrogen with vaginal dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA, an androgen precursor) on dyspareunia (primary outcome), a symptom of VVA in postmenopausal women. Secondary outcomes are total symptom score of VVA (vaginal dryness, irritation/itching, maturation index, pH), clinical signs of VVA, sexual function, urogenital symptoms, vaginal histomorphology, sex hormone levels and short-term safety. The hypothesis of the study is that the treatments will have a similar effect on dyspareunia while DHEA, through local androgenic effects (eg growth of muscle tissue and nerve density in the vaginal wall), may be more effective in treating other related symptoms such as sexual dysfunction. 170 postmenopausal women will be randomly assigned to treatment with either vaginal estrogen (Vagifem) or vaginal DHEA (Intrarosa). The women are examined at the start of the study, after 4 weeks of daily application and after another 8 weeks of treatment with twice a week application of the vaginal treatment. The study is expected to provide increased knowledge about the effect of the treatments of VVA in postmenopausal women as well as whether vaginal DHEA has additional positive effects on sexual function compared to vaginal estrogen.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
170
Vagifem® (estradiol), vaginal tablets
Intrarosa® (dehydroepiandrosterone; DHEA; prasterone), pessaries
Karolinska University Hospital
Stockholm, Sweden
Dyspareunia, a symptom of VVA in postmenopausal women
Patient reports in the Vaginal Atrophy Symptoms Questionnaire (VASQ, section 1). A 4-point scale, where a higher point means more symptoms.
Time frame: Primary endpoint will be evaluated as change in dyspareunia (VASQ section 1) from baseline to Week 12
Total symptom score of VVA
Vaginal dryness and irritation/itching (VASQ, section 2 and 3, a 4-point scale, where a higher point means more symptoms)
Time frame: Change from baseline to Week 4 and 12
Clinical signs of VVA
Examination of vaginal atrophy symptoms (VAX). A 4-point scale, where a higher point means more symptoms.
Time frame: Change from baseline to Week 4 and 12
Sexual function
Profile of Female Sexual Function (PFSF) and its seven domains desire, arousal, orgasm, pleasure, concern, responsiveness and self-image (range from 0 to 100, where a lower score means more dysfunction)
Time frame: Change from baseline to Week 4 and 12
Urinary incontinence
The Incontinence Impact Questionnaire (IIQ-7, a 4-point scale, where a higher point means more symptoms)
Time frame: Change from baseline to Week 4 and 12
Histomorphology of the vaginal wall
Histomorphology (thickness of epithelium, lamina propria and muscle layer in vaginal biopsies)
Time frame: Change from baseline to Week 4 and 12
Sex hormone levels
Sex hormone levels (estradiol and testosterone)
Time frame: Change from baseline to Week 4 and 12
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