• squaresinger@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    However, the trial ended prematurely as investigators did not meet their sample size, so the funding was discontinued.

    How? Why? This kind of study should be trivially easy to complete. The medication is already on the market, generics are super cheap, administration is super simple and non-invasive and I’d guess there are plenty of women suffering from PMS. That sounds like the kind of study that a grad student could pull off on a DIY budget.

    According to Google, generics are ~€0.50 per dose and they administered a single dose per patient. Let’s say placebos cost the same as the generics, then the cost for these 25 participants was less than €15.

    • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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      3 months ago

      Weirdly, they administered sildanefil vaginally. You’ll need a pharmacist and a laboritory to create sildenafil vaginal suppositories, so a bit above grad school level.

      The reason they cite for the decline of funding - “PMS doesn’t exist” - shows that the real reason is misogynistic managers.

      • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Weirdly, they administered sildanefil vaginally. You’ll need a pharmacist and a laboritory to create sildenafil vaginal suppositories, so a bit above grad school level.

        Still something that any pharmacy can do for a low price. They only need to grind up regular sildanefil pills and put the powder into vaginal suppositories.

        Our pharmacy did something similar for anal suppositories for our baby when there were covid-related shortages for ibuprofen suppositories.