4.1 Review

Novel agents for the medical treatment of endometriosis

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 243-252

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/GCO.0000000000000084

Keywords

endometriosis; estrogen or progesterone receptor modulators; inflammation and angiogenesis; medical treatment; tissue invasion and kinase inhibitor

Funding

  1. Leuven University Hospital Clinical Research Foundation
  2. Flemish Foundation for Scientific Research (FWO, Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, Belgium)
  3. Ferring Pharmaceuticals
  4. Merck Serono
  5. Besins

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Purpose of review Current medical treatments for endometriosis-associated pain, including oral contraceptives, progestins and GnRH agonists, are partially effective and have significant side-effects. The purpose of this review is to present new hormonal and nonhormonal treatment for endometriosis. Recent findings At present, the ideal drug that can prevent, inhibit or stop development of endometriosis, reduce associated pain or infertility and allow conception does not exist. New drugs in development for endometriosis modulate GnRH, estrogen and/or progesterone receptors, or target endometriosis-associated inflammation, angiogenesis, adhesion and/or tissue invasion. Most have been tested in rodents, and have been evaluated in more relevant animal models like nonhuman primates (baboons), but only a few, that is GnRH antagonists, have been tested in human randomized controlled trials. Important safety and efficacy issues remain a concern, as steroid receptors, inflammation, adhesion, angiogenesis and tissue invasion are key factors in physiological events like ovulation, menstruation and embryo implantation. Summary New drugs for the medical treatment of endometriosis targeting both hormonal (GnRH, estrogen and progesterone receptors) and nonhormonal pathways (inflammation, angiogenesis, adhesions, tissue invasion) are promising, but their efficacy and safety need to be established in randomized human trials before they can be used in clinical practice.

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