The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether adding the medicine letrozole to Misoprostol helps women have a complete abortion more often than using Misoprostol alone for the treatment of missed miscarriage (when a pregnancy has stopped developing but has not yet passed naturally). The main questions this study aims to answer are: 1. Does taking letrozole for 3 days before misoprostol increase the chance of a complete abortion compared to misoprostol alone? 2. Does the use of letrozole affect the time it takes for abortion to occur? Who can Join? i. Women up to 13 weeks of pregnancy (based on last menstrual period and confirmed by ultrasound) who have a missed miscarriage. ii. Only those with a single pregnancy are eligible. iii. Women with a previous cesarean section or uterine scar are not included. What Will Happen in the Study A total of 92 women will take part. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: Group A: Letrozole tablets once daily for 3 days, followed by one dose of vaginal misoprostol. Group B: Placebo tablets for maximum of 3 days, followed by one dose of vaginal misoprostol. Doctors will monitor whether the abortion is complete within 24 hours. If it is not, other medical procedures will be offered as needed. Products of conception will be examined to confirm abortion.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
92
800 micrograms of a single dose of vaginal misoprostol will be given
10 mg oral letrozole for 3 days will be given
oral placebo for three days will be given
Nishtar Medical University and Hospital
Multan, Punjab Province, Pakistan
RECRUITINGComplete abortion
The expulsion of both fetus and placenta without operative intervention and no retained products of conception confirmed on ultrasound.
Time frame: From start of study medication after randomization to within 24-hours
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