1. Pretreatment with transdermal testosterone may improve ovarian response to gonadotrophins in poor-responder IVF patients with normal basal concentrations of FSH.
- Author
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Balasch J, Fábregues F, Peñarrubia J, Carmona F, Casamitjana R, Creus M, Manau D, Casals G, and Vanrell JA
- Subjects
- Administration, Cutaneous, Adult, Androstenedione blood, Estradiol blood, Female, Humans, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I analysis, Luteinizing Hormone blood, Oocytes, Ovarian Follicle drug effects, Ovarian Follicle growth & development, Ovary drug effects, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Rate, Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin analysis, Testosterone blood, Tissue and Organ Harvesting methods, Fertilization in Vitro methods, Follicle Stimulating Hormone, Human therapeutic use, Ovary physiology, Testosterone administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: Treatment of poor-responder patients to controlled ovarian stimulation for assisted reproduction, who have normal basal FSH concentrations, is one of the most difficult challenges in reproductive medicine. This study investigated the usefulness of testosterone pretreatment in such patients., Methods: Prospective, therapeutic, self-controlled clinical trial including 25 consecutive infertile patients who had a background of the first and second IVF treatment cycle cancellations due to poor follicular response, in spite of vigorous gonadotrophin ovarian stimulation and having normal basal FSH levels. In the third IVF attempt, all patients received transdermal testosterone treatment (20 microg/kg per day) during the 5 days preceding gonadotrophin treatment., Results: Twenty patients (80%) showed an increase of over fivefold in the number of recruited follicles, produced 5.8+/-0.4 (mean+/-SEM) oocytes, received two or three embryos and achieved a clinical pregnancy rate of 30% per oocyte retrieval. There were 20% cancelled cycles., Conclusion: Pretreatment with transdermal testosterone may be a useful approach for women known to be low responders on the basis of a poor response to controlled ovarian stimulation but having normal basal FSH concentrations.
- Published
- 2006
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