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Publication

Corifollitropin alfa followed by rFSH in a GnRH antagonist protocol for poor ovarian responder patients: an observational pilot study.

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

OBJECTIVE:

To identify whether women with poor ovarian response may benefit from treatment with corifollitropin alfa in a GnRH antagonist protocol.

DESIGN:

Retrospective pilot study.

SETTING:

University-based tertiary care center.

PATIENT(S):

Poor ovarian responders fulfilling the Bologna criteria developed by European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology Consensus Group.

INTERVENTION(S):

Corifollitropin alfa (150 ?g) followed by 300 IU rFSH in a GnRH antagonist protocol.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S):

Endocrinologic profile and ongoing pregnancy rates.

RESULT(S):

Among 43 women treated with corifollitropin alfa, mean E(2) levels showed an increasing pattern during the follicular phase, reaching 825 ng/L on the day of hCG administration, whereas FSH values showed a marked increase during the first 5 days, reaching a mean value of 35 IU/L and remaining above 20 IU/L during the late follicular phase. Cycle cancellation rate was 32.6% and embryo transfer rate 53.3%. Five patients (11.7%) had a positive hCG test and three (7%) had an ongoing pregnancy. Ongoing pregnancy rates were 11.1% per oocyte retrieval and 13% per embryo transfer. Ongoing pregnancy rates per patient did not significantly differ compared with a cohort of patients treated during 2011 with the standard protocol for poor responders in our center (short agonist-hMG) (7% vs. 6.3%).

CONCLUSION(S):

Treatment of poor ovarian responders, as described by the Bologna criteria, with corifollitropin alfa in a GnRH antagonist protocol results in low pregnancy rates, similarly to conventional stimulation with a short agonist protocol.
Journal: Fertil. Steril.
ISSN: 0015-0282
Volume: 99
Pages: 422-426
Publication year:2013
Keywords:Poor responders, Bologna criteria, corifollitropin alfa, poor ovarian response, IVF
  • ORCID: /0000-0001-5019-5924/work/61226456
  • Scopus Id: 84873301716