Taiwanese Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology (Sep 2022)

The effects of estrogen induction therapy on pubertal presentations in turner syndrome patients

  • Yi-Chen Lee,
  • Chi-Yu Huang,
  • Chao-Hsu Lin,
  • Bi-Wen Cheng,
  • Shih-Kang Huang,
  • Shu-Nin Yeh,
  • Yann-Jinn Lee,
  • Wei-Hsin Ting

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 5
pp. 788 – 793

Abstract

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Objective: In this study, we investigated various pubertal presentations and progressions before and after estrogen induction therapy and the correlations with Turner syndrome karyotypes. Materials and methods: We reviewed the medical records of patients with Turner syndrome diagnosed before the age of 18 years between 2000 and 2019. Sixty-six patients were enrolled and distributed into 45,X monosomy group, X chromosome structural abnormalities group and X mosaicism group. The pubertal presentations were classified into spontaneous puberty, arrested puberty and no spontaneous puberty. All patients’ karyotypes, pubertal progressions and laboratory data were collected and analyzed. Results: The karyotypes were highly correlated with pubertal presentations. No spontaneous puberty was noticed in 58.3% 45,X monosomy patients, 50% patients with X chromosome structural abnormalities had arrested puberty, whereas 70% patients with X mosaicism had spontaneous puberty. Estrogen induction therapy in patients with no spontaneous puberty could induce puberty and the tempo of puberty may approximate to the spontaneous puberty group (median, 2.3 vs. 2.2 years, P = 0.95). In both interventional groups, the FSH level was distinguishable before treatment (median, 65.1 vs. 100.4 mIU/mL, P = 0.02). After long term estrogen therapy, the FSH could be suppressed to similar level in both interventional groups (median, 37.5 vs 34.5 mIU/mL, P = 0.84). Neither LH nor E2 level provided valuable information before and after treatment. Conclusion: The karyotypes were highly correlated with pubertal presentations at Turner syndrome patients. The integrity of 2nd X chromosome plays an important role. Low dose estrogen could mimic the tempo of puberty even delay induction age at Taiwan. The FSH data could provide predictive information of pubertal induction for both interventional groups.

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