During in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment, women receive hormone stimulation with gonadotropins to induce growth of several ovarian follicles. Selecting the optimal dosage of gonadotropin is important to avoid maturation of too few or too many follicles, which may impair the chances of treatment success, lead to treatment cancellation, or serious side effects. Motivated by the lack of standardised procedures to estimate the optimal dosage of gonadotropins, a patient-specific test has been developed to predict the optimal hormone dosage. By measuring internalisation of gonadotropin by the patient's monocytes isolated form the peripheral blood ex vivo, the Gonadotropin Removal Test determines whether a patient needs increased or reduced hormon doses. In this clinical study the investigators compare deviation from optimal outcome at oocyte pick-up day in two patient groups. Optimal outcome of stimulation is defined as 10 oocytes collected in the group of patients matching the inclusion criteria of the study. The control group receives starting hormone dosage assigned by the clinician according to standard clinical procedures. The intervention group receives starting hormone dosage adjusted according to the results of the Gonadotropin Removal Test.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
196
Patient receives hormone dosage adjusted according to the results of the Gonadotropin removal test.
Patient receives hormone dosage according to the standard dosage regimen, without revealing the results of the Gonadotropin removal test to the clinician.
Department of Reproductive Medicine, Oslo University Hospital
Oslo, Norway
Deviation from optimal ovarian response, defined as 10 oocytes collected during transvaginal follicle aspiration
Difference from optimal ovarian response (defined as 10 oocytes collected) is calculated for each patient. The mean these differences is compared between treatment and control groups.
Time frame: The day of follicle aspiration.
Consistency of optimal ovarian response during stimulation.
Difference from optimal ovarian response (defined as 10 oocytes collected) is calculated for each patient. Variance of these differences is compared between treatment and control groups.
Time frame: The day of follicle aspiration.
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