View clinical trials related to Infertility.
Filter by:Many couples experience involuntary childlessness and seek treatment at fertility clinics. Going through treatment procedures can be very challenging, time consuming and emotionally demanding. Psychosocial intervention might have a soothing and healing effect on both behavior as well on physical matters. Hence, the investigators would like to investigate whether Expressive Writing Intervention (EWI) has an effect on stress management as well as on the pregnancy rate for couples who are going through fertility treatment.
Efficacy and safety studies in the past have suggested that a starting dose of 75 International Unit (IU) of SJ-0021, and an increase in the dose by 37.5 IU every 7 days, are safe for treatment of subjects with ovulatory disorders who are infertile due to hypothalamic or pituitary dysfunction and have amenorrhea I or anovulatory cycles (including oligomenorrhea and polymenorrhea). This was a phase III, multicentre, single-blind, parallel-group comparative study conducted to provide confirmatory evidence of non-inferiority of SJ-0021 versus purified gonadotropin, a comparator drug, for induction of follicle development and ovulation in infertile Japanese women and to provide further information on the safety and tolerability of SJ-0021.
The purpose of this study is to prospectively define a set of data suitable for developing models of pregnancy viability. Those models will be based on serum hCG concentration measured during the peri-implantation period in patients that received fresh embryo transfer and those that received transfer of frozen-thawed embryos, and to compare and contrast these models. This may reveal insights into differences between these types of IVF cycles.
This was a prospective, open-label, non-comparative, Phase IIIb trial to assess the convenience, safety and efficacy of the new Gonal-F fbm [recombinant follicle stimulating hormone (r-FSH)] liquid formulation, in common setting for ovulation induction (OI) and also in in-vitro fertilization (IVF).
The Reproductive Medicine Network (RMN) is a nationwide cooperative network of 7 clinical sites and a data coordination center, and is sponsored in 5 year increments by The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). The RMN is charged with designing, implementing and publishing high quality clinical research in reproductive medicine. It has been in existence for over 15 years and has performed several seminal clinical trials that have fundamentally changed clinical practice in this field. In addition, many worthy ancillary protocols have been generated and published. It is this latter fact, as well as the continued interest by investigators both inside and outside the RMN for access to DNA or serum samples from the previously performed trials, that has motivated the present investigators to proactively begin a biologic samples repository from the ongoing and pending RMN clinical trials. Ideally, this repository would allow investigators to seamlessly access trial samples for many years into the future, and thus greatly amplify the use of resources and the impact of the RMN.
Phase: I pharmacokinetic - pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) study. Main objective: To establish the minimum effective dose of progesterone microspheres suspension, which administered by weekly intramuscular injection, will be able to induce transformation from a proliferative endometrium to a secretory endometrium. Study design: Randomized, controlled, open-label, parallel, dose-response clinical trial. Sites: 1 Subjects: 48 postmenopausal women.
Recent controversy has arisen regarding the use of the pill for cycle planning in GnRH antagonist IVF cycles. The investigators performed this study to compare such a protocol with the gold-standard still today, which is the long-agonist protocol with no previous use of the pill.
Pregnancy rate may be affected by multiple factors such as embryo transfer techniques. Even small differences in embryo transfer methods may affect pregnancy rates. There is an inconsistency about the effect of the removal of cervical discharge on embryo transfer outcomes. Some studies showed that cervical mucus removal before embryo transfer can increase pregnancy rate, however the others could not find any significant effect about the removal of cervical mucus on pregnancy or live birth rates. Given to the conflicting evidences, our study aimed to determine whether the cervical discharge removal has positive effect on pregnancy rate.
With the development of the recombinant gonadotrophins, the use of human source proteins for the production of hormones has become unnecessary. These proteins, which are found in urinary preparations, have been thought to cause the local, post-injection adverse events (AEs) in some subjects. There has been a demand by physicians for an alternative to urinary products for treatment. Due to allergies to urinary products, or other personal reasons, subjects were not able or willing to be treated with proteins of human origin. This study allowed subjects to be treated with the recombinant human chorionic gonadotropin (r hCG) (free of urinary proteins), which otherwise would not be possible. The study sponsor used this opportunity to collect additional safety data on the new recombinant product, (Ovidrel, r-hCG).
Human gonadotrophins have been successfully used for the treatment of infertility for more than 30 years. This observational study is being conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the gonadotropins used for controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) in assisted reproductive technologies (ART).