ESPE2023 Poster Category 1 Sex Differentiation, Gonads and Gynaecology, and Sex Endocrinology (56 abstracts)
1Radboud university medical center, Nijmegen, Netherlands. 2Nij Geertgen Center for Fertility, Elsendorp, Netherlands. 3Radboud university medical center, Amalia Children's Hospital, Nijmegen, Netherlands
Background: A reduced reproductive lifespan is one of the most significant implications for girls with Turner syndrome (TS) and is due to an accelerated loss of ovarian insufficiency. Lately, there has been a surge in scientific research aimed at whether ovarian tissue cryopreservation (OTC) is a viable option for fertility preservation in girls with TS. This required a unilateral ovariectomy for girls with TS who may already have a poor ovarian reserve.
Study question: What is the impact of unilateral ovariectomy on the ovarian function of the remaining ovary in girls with TS undergoing OTC?
Methods: A prospective descriptive study of 28 girls with TS (aged 5-19 years) who underwent OTC and had follicles in the ovarian tissue. Pubertal development and levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), Oestradiol, Anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH) and inhibin B were monitored up to three years after OTC. Main results and role of chance: Of the 28 girls, 1 girl had 45, X-karyotype, 21 had mosaic-karyotype with 46,XX-cell line and 6 had other karyotypes (45,X/47,XXX or structural aberration of the X-chromosome). Puberty was induced in 1/28 girls and inhibited in 1/28 girls prior to OTC. Of the 13 prepubertal girls at OTC, 7/13 girls were still prepubertal at the end of the follow-up. Of the other 6 prepubertal girls, 4/6 had experienced spontaneous thelarche and 2/6 spontaneous menarche. In 6/6 girls with spontaneous thelarche before OTC, a spontaneous menarche occurred during the follow-up period. Of the 7 girls with menarche prior to OTC, 5/7 continued having regular menstrual bleeding. Of the 28 girls, 5 needed hormone suppletion (1 because of induction of puberty and 4 because of signs of ovarian insufficiency). Girls who experienced ovarian insufficiency had low or undetectable levels of AMH at OTC. In 9/28 girls, FSH rose >10 E/L within 2 years after OTC. However, in 19/28 girls, FSH levels remained below 10 E/L during the three-year follow-up. In 10 girls a biphasic pattern (decrease-increase) of AMH levels could be recognized.
Conclusion: OTC only had a mild influence on pubertal development. In almost 90% of girls the pubertal development continued after unilateral ovariectomy. Ovarian insufficiency occurred in girls who were at a priori increased risk of developing ovarian insufficiency based on their hormone levels.