View clinical trials related to Poor Ovarian Response.
Filter by:In this controlled trial, poor ovarian responder women will be treated with transplantation of autologous menstrual blood stem cells. The investigators will attempt to assess the safety and efficacy of this procedure for the treatment of infertility in POR patients compared to control group.
This prospective randomized controlled trial is designed to investigate the effect of acupuncture on IVF/ICSI outcome in women with poor ovarian response. The study population consisted of all infertile women with a previous poor ovarian response who will undergo IVF/ICSI in Reproductive Biomedicine Research Center, Royan institute, Tehran Iran. To minimize the effect of ovarian stimulation protocol, a stratified randomization method according to ovarian stimulation protocols (GnRH agonist stopped and GnRH antagonist) is used.
Patients in experimental group will be given transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS) treatment for 12 weeks prior to controlled ovarian stimulation (COS).The patients will be given three times acupuncture every week except menstruation.Patients in no intervention group will not be given any interventions for 12 weeks prior to COS. The primary outcome measure is the number of MII eggs obtained in the COS cycle. The secondary outcome measures are the lab and clinical reproductive outcomes.
Until now no scientific clinical evidence exists regarding the possible impact of long term endogenous androgen priming in IVF patients aligned with the Bologna Criteria, in specific the impact of priming on serum parameters correlated with the ovarian reserve, antral follicle count, and the number of retrievable follicles. Thus, this pilot-study will explore a new suggested protocol for the Bologna criteria patient developed from basic physiology, and will if successful result in a subsequent randomized controlled trial in the same subset of patients, enabling a possible paradigm shift in the treatment of poor ovarian response (POR).
AR is a steroid hormone receptor that regulates various genes' expression and affects cellular proliferation and differentiation. Androgens interact with AR, exert their paracrine action on granulosa cells and regulate gonadotropin synthesis, follicle development, oocyte maturation and corpus luteum function. Estrogens increase AR mRNA and testosterone binding site in uterine endometrium and leiomyoma. In human cancer cells, low estradiol increases AR levels, suggesting the estrogen/androgen ratio as a predictor of sex steroid response. AR mRNA expression is, also, regulated by progesterone. Although AR mRNA is expressed in the female reproductive tissues, its expression has never been studied in peripheral blood.
In combination with the existing literature, previous work indicates that 1) women with poor ovarian response fulfilling the "Bologna criteria" have very low pregnancy rates, irrespective of age 2) current treatment protocols demonstrate ongoing pregnancy rates that do not exceed 8.5% and 3) corifollitropin alfa followed by hpHMG might increase ongoing pregnancy rates in young patients (<40years old) fulfilling the criteria. These findings provide a strong rationale for a definitive large RCT. The COMPORT study will provide conclusive evidence regarding the superiority or not of this novel protocol with corifollitropin alfa followed by hpHMG for the treatment of young poor ovarian responders fulfilling the Bologna criteria.
The purpose of the present study is to examine the level of ovarian response and the pregnancy rates among poor ovarian responders treated with a novel treatment protocol with 150μg corifollitropin alfa followed by 300IU hMG in a long GnRH agonist protocol.
The purpose of the present study is to examine the level of ovarian response and the pregnancy rates among poor ovarian responders treated with a novel treatment protocol with 150μg corifollitropin alfa followed by 300IU hMG in a short GnRH agonist protocol.