Hormonal Changes in Early Pregnancy



Status:Completed
Conditions:Women's Studies
Therapuetic Areas:Reproductive
Healthy:No
Age Range:25 - 35
Updated:3/20/2019
Start Date:January 18, 2005

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Hormonal Changes in Early Pregnancy: Pilot Study to Evaluate Stored Urine Specimens

This study will analyze hormones in early pregnancy. Hormonal changes in early pregnancy
reflect the quality of implantation in the uterus of the fertilized egg, the function of the
corpus luteum (mass of hormone-secreting tissue that forms immediately after ovulation) and
placenta, and the health of the embryo. It will determine the following:

- Whether early pregnancy hormones vary by characteristics of the mother

- Whether early pregnancy hormones differ for pregnancies with male or female babies

- Whether early pregnancy hormones can predict the gestational age (age of the baby during
pregnancy) and the baby's birth weight

- Hormone activity at the time pregnancy symptoms begin

- How the contribution of the corpus luteum changes during the pregnancy in different
women

Stored urine specimens collected from women who participated in the North Carolina Early
Pregnancy Study in the 1980s will be used for this study. In addition, to evaluate the
quality of the stored samples, new specimens will be collected from women currently enrolled
in the University of North Carolina's Right from the Start study. Candidates must be white
women not of Latino or Hispanic origin who are between 25 and 35 years of age and who are
planning to become pregnant within a few months' time. They must be non-smokers, have regular
menstrual cycles, no known fertility problems and no major chronic disease.

Urine specimens are analyzed for hormone levels and other changes in early pregnancy that can
be measured in urine. Women providing new urine specimens do the following:

Pre-Pregnancy

The pre-pregnancy part of the study lasts through no more than three consecutive menstrual
cycles. Participants who do not become pregnant after three menstrual cycles end the study at
that time.

- Have a short interview with a study staff member

- Complete a daily diary, recording any vaginal bleeding or spotting, health status, and
use of medications, and mail the diary to the study office once a week

- Use an ovulation testing kit for up to 7 days during their menstrual cycle

- Call the study staff within the first 24 hours of becoming pregnant

Pregnancy

The pregnancy part of the study lasts about 5 weeks.

- Continue to complete daily diary records for weekly pickup by staff member

- Collect urine samples daily and store them in the freezer for weekly pickup by staff
member

- Have 1 to 2 tablespoons of blood drawn at home weekly for 4 weeks

- Have a brief follow-up telephone interview around week 12 of their pregnancy

Urine samples are analyzed for hormones such as human chorionic gonadotropin,
estrone-3-glucuronide, and pregnanedrol glucuronide. White blood cells are stored for DNA to
study such things as genes controlling hormone metabolism.

Daily first morning urine specimens were collected throughout the first 8-9 weeks of 151
clinical pregnancies. These specimens are now approximately 20 years in storage, and the
stability of markers of placental and corpus luteum function are not known. We will collect
new urine specimens for 20 pregnancies to serve as a reference to evaluate the quality of
those stored samples.

- INCLUSION/EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

We will recruit from the pre-pregnancy participants in the Right From the Start UNC study
entitled, Consequences and Course of Uterine Fibroid in Pregnancies.

The women will be selected to be similar to the majority of women in the NC-EPS because we
need to have a comparable sample of women in order to best compare hormone levels.

Entry requirements will be:

white (including Hispanic and latino), age 25-35, regular menstrual cycles, nonsmoker
(i.e., no smoking in past year), no major chronic disease, no known fertility problems, no
more than 3 months of trying for this current pregnancy.
We found this trial at
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Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
(919) 962-2211
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Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709
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