Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03795220

Preparing and Timing of the Endometrium in Modified Natural Cycle Frozen-thawed Embryo Transfers

Preparing and Timing of the Endometrium in Modified Natural Cycle Frozen-thawed Embryo Transfers (mNC-FET) - a Randomized Controlled Multicenter Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
679 (actual)
Sponsor
Anja Bisgaard Pinborg · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 41 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The increasing use of FET emphasizes the importance of preparing and timing the endometrium in FET cycles, however there is no consensus on luteal phase progesterone supplementation in mNC-FET and the optimal day of blastocyst warming and transfer. The aim of this multicenter RCT is to assess the effect of progesterone supplementation in hCG-triggered mNC-FET and the effect of embryo thawing and transfer at hCG+6 or hCG+7 days, respectively. In total 604 patients will be included with n=151 in each of the four study arms. The primary outcome is live birth rate per transfer (LBR) and the goal is to show a 10% increase in LBR after progesterone supplementation and to assess whether blastocyst warming+transfer 6 days after hCG trigger is superior to 7 days after hCG trigger in mNC-FET.

Detailed description

Single embryo transfer and freezing of surplus embryos has lowered twin birth rates after in vitro fertilization (IVF) to a level of less than 5% in Denmark. However, several treatments with repeated frozen embryo transfers (FET) before a viable pregnancy is confirmed are burdensome to the patients. New freezing techniques has optimized the quality of the embryo transferred in FET cycles, but optimization of the endometrium in the luteal phase is still lacking behind. In a mNC-FET, which is the routine in many clinics, ovulation is induced with an hCG injection when the leading follicle is ≥17 mm. The hCG trigger is important for controlling the time of ovulation, but triggering an unhealthy follicle at an inappropriate time may cause luteal phase insufficiency and thus suboptimal function of the endometrium. Danish public fertility clinics are not routinely using progesterone supplementation in mNC-FET, but there may be a rationale to do so, and some implantations may be rescued. In this study we will compare live birth rates in mNC-FET with and without progesterone supplementation in the luteal phase, and further we will explore the optimal timing of blastocyst warming and transfer by comparing embryo transfer at hCG trigger +6 days versus +7 days. This is a superiority study with the aim to detect an increase in live birth rates of 10%. Hence, this adequately powered RCT may make a major contribution to knowledge on mNC-FET to the benefits of patients. We will include 604 patients divided 1:1 (302:302) in each arm +/- progesterone and these will further be divided 1:1 in blastocyst warming and transfer +6 and +7 days after hCG injection. The primary endpoint is live birth rate per transfer.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGLutinus + transfer day 6Four parallel groups of patients undergoing fertility treatment (modified natural cycle frozen embryo transfer) will be compared using/not using vaginal progesterone (Lutinus) and subject to blastocyst warming and transfer 6/7 days after hCG trigger.
DRUGLutinus + transfer day 7Four parallel groups of patients undergoing fertility treatment (modified natural cycle frozen embryo transfer) will be compared using/not using vaginal progesterone (Lutinus) and subject to blastocyst warming and transfer 6/7 days after hCG trigger.
DRUGNo Lutinus + transfer day 6Four parallel groups of patients undergoing fertility treatment (modified natural cycle frozen embryo transfer) will be compared using/not using vaginal progesterone (Lutinus) and subject to blastocyst warming and transfer 6/7 days after hCG trigger.
DRUGNo Lutinus + transfer day 7Four parallel groups of patients undergoing fertility treatment (modified natural cycle frozen embryo transfer) will be compared using/not using vaginal progesterone (Lutinus) and subject to blastocyst warming and transfer 6/7 days after hCG trigger.

Timeline

Start date
2019-01-06
Primary completion
2024-12-31
Completion
2024-12-31
First posted
2019-01-07
Last updated
2025-05-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03795220. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.