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Using Soy Estrogens to Prevent Bone Loss and Other Menopausal Symptoms

Phase 3
Completed
Conditions
Menopause
Osteopenia
Osteoporosis
Interventions
Dietary Supplement: Placebo
Dietary Supplement: Soy isoflavones
Registration Number
NCT00076050
Lead Sponsor
University of Miami
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine if soy-derived phytoestrogens (naturally occurring compounds similar to estrogen) can prevent bone loss and other menopausal symptoms in women who have recently gone through menopause.

Study hypothesis: Tablets of high-dose, purified soy phytoestrogens spare the normally occurring spinal bone loss and improve biological and other emotional changes of menopause.

Detailed Description

The risks of bone loss and osteoporosis increase significantly after menopause. Although hormone therapy (HT) can spare menopausal women from bone loss and other menopausal symptoms, Women's Health Initiative (WHI) findings indicate significant potential health risks associated with HT. This has prompted women to switch from HT to naturally occurring compounds similar to estrogen, such as those derived from soy, in the hope that estrogens from plant sources can provide benefits while sparing adverse effects caused by prescribed estrogens. However, the long-term efficacy and safety of plant estrogens are unknown. This study will evaluate the effectiveness of treatment using purified soy isoflavones, a dietary source of phytoestrogens, in preventing bone loss, menopausal symptoms, and other changes associated with estrogen deficiency in young menopausal women. The "Soy Phytoestrogens As Replacement Estrogen (SPARE)" study will provide a foundation of knowledge from which menopausal women and their doctors can begin to make more informed decisions regarding HT and other treatment options.

Enrollment into the study will occur over 3 years, with each participant taking part in the study for a total of 2 years. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups; the first group will receive a 200 mg dose of soy isoflavones daily and the second group will receive placebo daily. There will be 10 study visits: screening, study entry, randomization at Month 1, six follow-up visits at Months 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and a final visit at the end of active participation at Month 24. At each study visit, participants will have blood drawn, provide urine samples, answer questionnaires, and have mammograms and bone density tests.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
248
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
2PlaceboParticipants will receive placebo daily over 2 years.
1Soy isoflavonesParticipants will receive a 200-mg dose of soy isoflavones daily over 2 years.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Densitybaseline and 2 years
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in Women's Health Questionnaire Scorebaseline and 2 years

This self-administered questionnaire contains 23 items, distributed among 6 factors: anxiety and depressed mood (7 items), well-being (4 items), somatic symptoms (5 items), memory and concentration (3 items), vasomotor symptoms (2 items) and sleep problems (2 items). The instrument has a structured format and the response choices consist of 4-point Likert scales ('yes definitely' to 'no, not at all'). Item scores are collapsed into a dichotomous scale, where higher scores indicate a greater level of symptomatology or difficulty; i.e., if the response is 1 or 2 (positive response), the score = 1; if the response is 3 or 4 (negative response), the score is 0. Results can be reported as a total score, where the range is 0-23, but also for each dimension. Thus, the ranges of the subscales are: for anxiety and mood 0-7, for well-being 0-4, somatic symptoms 0-5, memory and concentration 0-3, vasomotor symptoms 0-2 and sleep problems 0-2.

Change in Vaginal Maturation Valuebaseline and 2 years

The Vaginal Maturation Value (VMV) describes the proportion of the three vaginal epithelial cell types (parabasal, intermediate and superficial) obtained from a swab of the vaginal walls. The changes in the proportion of each type of cells reflects the degree of exposure to estrogen of the vaginal epithelium. The VMV lists the percentage of each type of cell appearing on the smear, with the total of all three values equaling 100%. The index is read from left to right; i.e. VMI of 5/40/55 represents 5% parabasal cells, 40% intermediate cells and 55% superficial cells. Exposure to estrogens results in some parabasal cells, a greater proportion of intermediate cells and few superficial cells.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Miami School of Medicine

🇺🇸

Miami, Florida, United States

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