EN | UA
EN | UA

Help Support

Back

Follicular growth rate: Predictor of IVF success in PCOS patients with slow ovarian response

PCOS PCOS
PCOS PCOS

This retrospective study evaluated the clinical decision between continuing ovarian stimulation or canceling the cycle in patients with slow ovarian response (SOR).

See All

Key take away

Monitoring follicular growth rate in PCOS patients with slow ovarian response helps guide IVF cycle continuation decisions, while hCG supplementation may improve ovarian responsiveness and increase the likelihood of clinical pregnancy.

Background

This retrospective study evaluated the clinical decision between continuing ovarian stimulation or canceling the cycle in patients with slow ovarian response (SOR). It also examined how SOR influences embryo developmental potential, in vitro fertilization (IVF) outcomes, and clinical pregnancy rates in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) undergoing assisted reproductive treatment.

Method

This study was conducted involving 482 women diagnosed with PCOS undergoing fertility treatment. Volunteers were categorized based on follicular growth dynamics into:

  • SOR group: 113 patients with SOR
  • Control group: 343 patients with normal follicular development

Additionally, data from patients whose cycles were canceled owing to severe SOR (C-SOR group, n = 18) were included for comparison. Key clinical and reproductive outcomes, including ovarian stimulation parameters, embryo development, and pregnancy outcomes, were systematically analyzed across the groups.

Result

The average follicular growth rate in the control group was considerably greater than SOR group and the cycle-cancellation group (Table 1).

Patients in both the SOR and C-SOR groups needed longer gonadotropin (Gn) stimulation and higher total Gn doses. Importantly, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) supplementation showed potential benefits in improving ovarian responsiveness in SOR patients. However, if the follicular growth rate remained below 1.0 mm/day, cycle cancellation was advocated. Although the number of retrieved oocytes was lower in the SOR group compared with controls, there were no prominent differences in fertilization rate, transferable embryo rate, or high-quality embryo rate between groups.

Likewise, clinical pregnancy rates after fresh or frozen embryo transfer were comparable. But, the SOR group illustrated lower cumulative clinical pregnancy rates (75.22% vs. 88.34%) and cumulative live birth rates (57.52% vs. 68.8%) as opposed to the control group. After adjusting for confounding factors, logistic regression assessment indicated that the link between SOR and cumulative live birth rate was not prominent (adjusted OR = 0.77).

Conclusion

Tracking follicular growth dynamics helped clinicians manage IVF cycles and optimize outcomes in PCOS patients with SOR.

Source:

Frontiers in Endocrinology

Article:

The management of slow ovarian response in PCOS patients and its impact on clinical pregnancy outcomes

Authors:

Yan Zhang et al.

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies en
Try: