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Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) supplementation results in supraphysiologic DHEA-S serum levels and progesterone assay interference that may impact clinical management in IVF.

Authors :
Franasiak JM
Thomas S
Ng S
Fano M
Ruiz A
Scott RT Jr
Forman EJ
Source :
Journal of assisted reproduction and genetics [J Assist Reprod Genet] 2016 Mar; Vol. 33 (3), pp. 387-391. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jan 12.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Purpose: Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is often prescribed for poor responders in IVF in an effort to improve response to ovarian stimulation. The effect of DHEA supplementation and resultant supraphysiologic DHEA-S serum levels on sex steroid assays has not been evaluated in this population. This study seeks to determine the relationship between DHEA supplementation and progesterone measurements to characterize the degree of interference with particular immunoassays.<br />Methods: Characterization was accomplished in two phases. First, DHEA-S standard control reagents with no progesterone present were assayed for both DHEA-S and progesterone levels. Second, serum pools from 60 unique IVF patients' serum were used to create six pooled serum samples: three from patients on DHEA supplementation and three from patients not on DHEA supplementation. The three pools were composed of patients whose serum fell into low, medium, and high progesterone ranges. Baseline DHEA-S and progesterone were measured, and the mean level of DHEA-S in the mid-range progesterone pool was used as the mid-point for addition of DHEA-S standard to the serum pools from patients without DHEA supplementation. Progesterone from these pools was then measured on three commercially available immunoassay systems.<br />Results: The first experiment revealed a linear increase in progesterone when analyzing the DHEA-S standard ranging from 0.5 μg/dL [corrected] in the blank control (no DHEA-S) to up to 2.0 μg/dL [corrected] in the high control (DHEA-S >700 μg/dL), [corrected] indicating that the DHEA-S cross-reacts with the progesterone assays. In the second experiment, patients' serum DHEA-S and progesterone were measured from pooled serum samples of those taking DHEA and those not taking DHEA. Adding DHEA-S to the pooled serum of those not taking DHEA resulted in a linear increase in progesterone levels on two of three commercially available immunoassays (p < 0.05).<br />Conclusions: DHEA-S can interfere with standard progesterone immunoassays used in clinical ART programs, and thus serum progesterone levels in IVF patients on DHEA supplementation may not reflect truly bioactive progesterone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1573-7330
Volume :
33
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of assisted reproduction and genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26758459
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10815-016-0650-3