Clinical Trial: The Effects of Estrogen on Cognition in Girls With Turner Syndrome

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: Estrogen Effects on Cognition in Girls With Turner Syndrome

Brief Summary:

The development of the brain in females is a result of a combination of factors. During puberty estrogen plays a role in influencing brain development. Cultural and environmental factors also play a role in the development of the brain.

Female patients with Turner syndrome lack the ability to produce estrogen due to undeveloped ovaries. Therefore, Turner syndrome is the perfect condition to study how estrogen (or the lack of estrogen) influences a person's behavior and thinking.

This study will compare cognitive differences (visual motor skills, visual-spatial, psychosocial behavior, and visual memory) of patients with Turner syndrome to normal patient controls. Researchers will use the Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISC-R) along with other tests and scales to measure different aspects of the patient's cognitive ability. In addition the study will review patients with Turner syndrome who previously received estrogen replacement as infants and children in a related research study.

Researchers hope to demonstrate that estrogen replacement will improve cognition and behavior in girls with Turner syndrome.


Detailed Summary:

Estrogen influences brain development in females at puberty. Environmental and cultural factors interact with the biological effects of estrogen on the brain and consequently on cognition and behavior. Turner syndrome females lack endogenous estrogen as a result of dysgenetic ovaries. Turner syndrome therefore represents a unique, estrogen-deficient model in which to study the biological effects of estrogen on cognition and behavior. The specific aims of this project are to: 1) document further, the cognitive differences between girls with Turner syndrome at ages 5 to adult (less than or equal to age 50) versus age-matched, female controls. 2) to examine the differential effects of continuous estrogen replacement in infancy and in early childhood on cognitive and social function in a unique, previously approved, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, treatment trial (87-CH-0152). Specifically, we hypothesize that estrogen replacement in early childhood will reduce the cognitive deficits of girls with Turner syndrome. In addition, we hypothesize that the degree of socialization ability in these girls will correlate with social-behavioral and social recognition ability. Finally, we hypothesize that earlier (infancy to 8 years) and longer estrogen replacement will result in less impairment of visual-motor ability, visual-spatial ability, socialization ability, and affective competence compared to later (9 to 12 years) estrogen replacement in girls with Turner syndrome.

Children with Turner syndrome and controls will be tested in the Outpatient Departments at the two approved sites of protocol 87-CH-0152; the NIH and Thomas Jefferson University.


Sponsor: Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

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Original Secondary Outcome:

Information By: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)

Dates:
Date Received: November 3, 1999
Date Started: May 1990
Date Completion: March 2004
Last Updated: March 3, 2008
Last Verified: March 2004