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The Role of hCG Triggering Progesterone Levels: A Real-World Retrospective Cohort Study of More Than 8000 IVF/ICSI Cycles. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how serum progesterone (P) levels affect the outcomes of fertilization cycles, focusing on clinical pregnancy rates (CPR) and live birth rates (LBR).
  • It involved a retrospective analysis of 8,034 fresh embryo transfers from 2012 to 2016, finding that higher P levels are linked to decreased CPR and LBR, with significant thresholds identified for different prognosis groups.
  • Results indicate that for lower risk patients with P levels under 1.75 ng/ml, embryo transfer may proceed, while higher levels warrant freezing embryos for future transfer.

Article Abstract

To assess the association between serum ovulation trigger progesterone (P) levels and the outcome of fertilization cycles. Real world single-center retrospective cohort study. All fresh cleavage and blastocyst-stage embryo transfers (ETs) performed from January 2012 to December 2016. The impact of premature high serum P levels cycles in terms of clinical pregnancy rates (CPRs) and live birth rates (LBRs). 8,034 ETs were performed: 7,597 cleavage-stage transfers and 437 blastocyst transfers. Serum P levels demonstrated to be inversely related to CPR (OR 0.72, < 0.001) and LBR (OR 0.73, < 0.001). The progressive decrease of LBR and CPR started when P levels were >1 ng/ml in a good prognosis cleavage ET subgroup, whereas in patients with worse prognosis only for ≥ 1.75 ng/ml. In the blastocyst ET subgroup, the negative effect of P elevation was reported only if P was >1.75 ng/ml. CPR (OR 0.71 (0.62-0.80), < 0.001) and LBR (OR 0.73 (0.63-0.84), < 0.001) in thawed cycles resulted statistically significantly higher than in fresh cycles in the cleavage-stage subgroup. In the blastocyst group, no significant difference resulted between thawed and fresh cycles, independently of P levels [CPR OR 0. 37 (0.49-1.09), = 0.123; LBR OR 0.71 (0.46-1.10), = 0.126]. High P levels decrease CPR as well as LBR in both cleavage and blastocyst ET. In the cleavage group, for P levels below 1.75 ng/ml, our data suggest the possibility to wait until day 5 for ET, and if P level is ≥1.75 ng/ml, it should be considered to freeze all embryos and postpone the ET. ClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT04253470.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7538643PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2020.547684DOI Listing

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