Abstract

ObjectiveAre there differences in serum progesterone levels between different routes of exogenous progesterone administration for artificial endometrial preparation? Material and methodsThis prospective, observational, single-centre study included 9 infertile female patients who underwent cycles of artificial endometrial preparation between January and June 2019 with different progesterone formulations (3 cycles in 2 patients; 2 cycles in 2 patients; and 1 cycle in 5 patients). Oestrogen stimulation was followed by vaginal progesterone 400 mg every 12 h (first cycle), subcutaneous progesterone 25 mg every 12 h (second cycle), and intramuscular progesterone 50 mg every 24 h (third cycle). Progesterone therapy was continued for 5 days and daily serum progesterone was recorded. The primary outcome was day 5 serum progesterone. ResultsDay 5 mean ± standard deviation serum progesterone levels after vaginal, subcutaneous, and intramuscular administration were 14.6 ± 5.5, 47.9 ± 22.3, and 60.3 ± 65.5 ng/mL, respectively (p = 0.032 across routes). From day 1 to day 5, the coefficients of variation for serum progesterone were 66% and 75% with the vaginal and subcutaneous routes, respectively, indicating low variability, and 146% with the intramuscular route, indicating high variability. Two linear regression models were conducted: a normal linear regression model, which found no significant effect of administration route on serum progesterone, and a mixed-effects linear regression model, which also showed no statistically significant differences between routes. ConclusionAll routes of progesterone administration showed satisfactory day 5 mean serum progesterone levels, regardless of administration route.

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