Abstract

The objective of this study was to compare hormonal response, luteal phase adequacy and pregnancy and abortion rates in patients randomized to receive human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) or gonadotrophin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) during ovulation cycles stimulated by clomiphene citrate. Anovulatory patients received either one s.c. dose of tryptorelin (0.1 mg; n = 104) or one i.m. dose of HCG (10,000 IU; n = 106) after clomiphene citrate stimulation had induced enlarged ovarian follicles (> 17 mm in diameter). A short-lived, transitory increase in serum luteinizing hormone (98 +/- 9 IU/l) and follicle-stimulating hormone (30 +/- 5 IU/l) concentrations was measured at 12 h following the injection of GnRHa, and these concentrations returned to baseline levels by 36 h post-injection. Midluteal progesterone concentrations were similar in both groups (> 10 ng/ml), and the mean luteal phase duration was also not significantly different (13 days). There were no significant differences in the mean number of pregnancies (12.0 versus 12.6% per cycle) and the abortion rate (18.2 versus 12.5%) between the GnRHa- and HCG-treated groups respectively. There were no complications related to treatment in either group. The results show that a relatively low dose of GnRHa can be used in place of HCG to induce ovulation in clomiphene citrate-treated patients.

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