Good news! Nice example of drug repurposing!
"Primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), in which the ovaries don’t mature and release eggs properly, affects about 3% of women under age 40 and typically causes infertility. But a drug already approved to treat kidney disease may one day help some of these people [women] get pregnant, a research team reports today in Science. ..."
From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Premature ovarian insufficiency is associated with decreased numbers of ovarian follicles and decreased frequency of menstrual periods before age 40. This occurs in more than 1% of women and leads to what is generally considered to be irreversible infertility. By screening a library of approved drugs, Lin et al. identified a promising candidate in finerenone, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist used for kidney disease ... The authors demonstrated that finerenone decreased ovarian fibrosis in mouse models, facilitating follicular development and improving fertility, and other antifibrotic drugs showed similar effects. In a pilot clinical trial, patients treated with finerenone showed improvement in ovarian function and follicle maturation, some getting as far as in vitro fertilization, all without major side effects or risk of fetal exposure.
Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) affects approximately 1 to 3% of women under the age of 40. It is characterized by symptoms such as oligomenorrhea or amenorrhea, sex steroid deficiency, elevated follicle-stimulating hormone levels, and infertility. Currently, no effective treatments exist to restore fertility in patients with POI. This is because ovarian follicular development in these patients is insufficient, typically lacking ultrasound-detectable antral follicles that are hormone-responsive. ...
RATIONALE
... we established a platform and systematically screened 1297 compounds from an FDA-approved drug library and identified finerenone as a safe and potentially effective candidate for treating POI-associated infertility.
RESULTS
We first revealed that finerenone promoted ovarian follicular development in mice, with no observed adverse effects on oocyte quality, early embryonic development, or offspring health.
Furthermore, our pilot clinical trial showed that oral finerenone administration (20 mg, twice weekly) promoted the development of follicles in patients with POI, yielding mature eggs (oocytes) and viable embryos. Mechanistically, we found that finerenone reduced collagen deposition (fibrosis) within aged ovaries, thus reducing the stromal fibrosis-mediated restriction of follicular development and creating a more permissive microenvironment for follicle activation and growth.
Based on these findings, we further identified a series of FDA-approved oral antifibrotic drugs, including nintedanib, ruxolitinib, and other drugs with established antifibrotic activity but based on distinct antifibrotic mechanisms, which were effective in promoting ovarian follicle growth. ... This broader validation across antifibrotic drugs with different mechanisms of action supports the notion that ovarian stromal fibrosis is a central, druggable, pathological condition that suppresses follicle growth in POI.
CONCLUSION
Our findings provide a starting point showing that targeting the ovarian stroma—rather than the follicles themselves—represents an effective therapeutic strategy for POI-related infertility. We propose that alleviating ovarian stromal fibrosis through repurposed antifibrotic drugs, such as finerenone, nintedanib, ruxolitinib, or other FDA-approved oral agents, offers a possible promising intervention for restoring fertility in patients with POI."
Antifibrotic drug finerenone restores fertility in premature ovarian insufficiency (no public access)
Schematic model of finerenone-mediated follicle growth.
Ovarian stromal collagen suppresses the development of small follicles (left), whereas finerenone reduces the fibrotic deposits (right), relieving stromal constraints and thus enabling follicle activation and development.
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