Abstract

To evaluate cycle outcomes in patients with either poor or normal prognosis undergoing IVF treatment with a GnRH antagonist (ganirelix acetate) for LH suppression. Nonrandomized, noncontrolled, retrospective review. 204 patients, aged 23-41 years, undergoing IVF. Patients completed 225 consecutive cycles of IVF with a GnRH antagonist (Antagon; Organon, Roseland, NJ) for LH surge prevention. Sixty cycles were conducted in patients with a known poor prognosis, whereas 165 were conducted in patients with a normal IVF prognosis. Pregnancy rate (PR), for the series as a whole and according to prognosis, and serum E2 patterns. The PR per initiated cycle for the series as a whole was 33.3%. The pregnancy rate was 42.1% per ET for the entire series, with a cycle cancellation rate of 21%. When evaluated by prognosis, the poor-prognosis patients had PRs of 8.3% per attempt and 15% per transfer, whereas the normal-prognosis patients had PRs of 40% per attempt and 45% per transfer. Pregnancy rate did not vary by E2 pattern (drop, plateau, or rise). Oral contraceptive pretreatment was noted to be associated with high cancellation rates in the group of known poor responders, whereas for the group as a whole, cycle outcome was unaffected by the use of oral contraceptives. Use of GnRH antagonists in patients with an a priori poor IVF prognosis results in predictably poor outcomes. Patients without factors predicting poor outcome have acceptable PRs. The pattern of E2 rise immediately after initiation of GnRH antagonists does not predict cycle outcome. Oral contraceptives can be successfully used to schedule antagonist-based IVF cycles but might increase the risk of cycle cancellation in some patient populations.

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