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WithdrawnNCT04850261

Injection Free IVF

Injection Free Natural Cycle In Vitro Fertilisation by Using a Nasal GnRH Agonist to Induce Ovulation. Is it More Comfortable for Patients and Equally Effective as Subcutaneous hCG Injection?

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 42 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Investigation of Natural Cycle In vitro Fertilisation (NC-IVF) treatment with ovulation induction with a nasal GnRH agonist instead of regular NC-IVF treatment with subcutaneous application of hCG with the objective of increasing treatment tolerability and reducing discomfort while being equally successful in terms of embryo transfer rates.

Detailed description

In vitro Fertilisation (IVF) treatments can be performed without gonadotropins to reduce side effects. These kinds of IVF treatments are called Natural Cycle IVF (NC-IVF). As NC-IVFs are almost equally effective as classical IVF with gonadotropins but less stressful, they are preferred by many women. However, a relevant burden in NC-IVF still is the ovulation induction by self-injection of human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG). Replacing hCG injection by a nasally applicable Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone agonist (GnRHa) might reduce this discomfort. GnRHa are already used to induce ovulation in classical IVF treatments. The objective of our study ist to answer the question whether NC-IVF treatment with a nasal GnRH agonist can increase treatment tolerability and reduce discomfort while being equally successful in terms of embryo transfer rates than NC-IVF treatment with subcutaneous application of hCG. The study will be a randomized controlled proof-of-concept trial. It will be performed in two steps whereas the power analysis only relates to the first step which is prospective-randomized and will be performed as follows: Step 1: Prior to the start of the first NC-IVF treatment cycle the patients will be randomized in equal parts by electronic randomisation to receive either the standard therapy with hCG injection (Intervention A) or the study therapy with nasal GnRHa (Intervention B). • Intervention A: As soon as the expected follicle size is \>15 mm, ovulation will be induced by injecting 5.000 IU hCG. The follicle aspiration, including flushing of the follicle will be performed 36 hours later. The transfer of the embryo will be performed 2-5 days after the aspiration. In order to determine estradiol- and progesterone concentrations blood will be taken 10±1 days after the hCG application. Pregnancy will be confirmed or excluded by hCG testing in serum or urine 14-21 days after the follicle aspiration. In case of positive hCG testing, clinical pregnancy will be confirmed by vaginal ultrasound 4-6 weeks after follicle aspiration. • Intervention B: The study therapy (Intervention B) will be performed identically as Intervention A with the following exception: Instead of injecting subcutaneous hCG the patients will apply 1 hub of a GnRHa nasal spray (200 microg Nafarelin) to induce ovulation. Step 2: If there is no pregnancy achieved in the first treatment cycle, the patients will switch to the respective other intervention (cross-over design). This procedure allows for an intraindividual comparison of the main outcomes (treatment tolerability and discomfort). Again, the two interventions will be performed as described in step 1. Questionnaires: At the beginning of the study, all participants will fill in the Fertility Quality of Life (FertiQoL) Core questionnaire. For each treatment cycle, they will additionally fill in the FertiQoL Treatment questionnaire and a set of visual analog scale (VAS) questions concerning the level of discomfort encountered in the treatment.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGhCG InjectionOvulation will be induced by subcutaneous hCG injection
DRUGNafarelin nasal sprayOvulation will be induced by nasal application of Nafarelin

Timeline

Start date
2021-05-01
Primary completion
2024-03-31
Completion
2024-03-31
First posted
2021-04-20
Last updated
2024-10-30

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04850261. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.