Evaluation of the relative cost-effectiveness of treatments for infertility in the UK. (49/1493)

This paper aims to complement existing clinical guidelines by providing evidence of the relative cost-effectiveness of treatments for infertility in the UK. A series of decision-analytical models have been developed to reflect current diagnostic and treatment pathways for the five main causes of infertility. Data to populate the models are derived from a systematic review and routine National Health Service activity data, and are augmented with expert opinion. Costs are derived from an analysis of extra-contractual referral tariffs and private sector data. Sensitivity analysis has been carried out to take account of the uncertainty of model parameters and to allow results to be interpreted in the light of local circumstances. Results of the modelling exercise suggest in-vitro fertilization is the most cost-effective treatment option for severe tubal factors and endometriosis, with surgery the most cost-effective in the case of mild or moderate disease. Ovulatory factors should be treated medically with the addition of laparoscopic ovarian diathermy in the presence of polycystic ovarian syndrome. For other causes, stimulated intrauterine insemination (unexplained and moderate male factor) and stimulated donor intrauterine insemination (severe male) are cost-effective.  (+info)

Prospective randomized study of human chorionic gonadotrophin priming before immature oocyte retrieval from unstimulated women with polycystic ovarian syndrome. (50/1493)

The present study examined whether the rates of oocyte maturation, fertilization and development, as well as pregnancy rate could be improved by human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) priming 36 h before immature oocyte retrieval in patients with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). Immature oocyte retrieval was performed on day 10-14 of the cycles and patients were randomly allocated either to be primed with 10 000 IU of HCG before the retrieval, or not primed. Immature oocytes were cultured for 24-48 h in TC-199 medium with 20% (v/v) inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS) supplemented with 75 mIU/ml follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) was performed in all mature oocytes and the resulting embryos were transferred on day 2 or 3 after ICSI. A total of 17 patients underwent 24 completed treatment cycles. Thirteen cycles were primed with HCG and 11 other cycles were not primed. The mean number of oocytes retrieved was comparable in the two groups (7.8 +/- 3.9 versus 7.4 +/- 5.2). The percentage of oocytes achieving maturation at 48 h was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the HCG-primed group (84.3%, 86/102) than in the non-HCG-primed group (69.1%, 56/81). Oocyte maturation was hastened in the HCG-primed group. Following 24 h of culture, 78.2 +/- 7.1% of oocytes were matured in the HCG-primed group compared with 4.9 +/- 2.5% of oocytes in the non-HCG-primed group (P < 0.001). There were no significant differences in the rates of oocyte fertilization and cleavage in these two groups. There were five clinical pregnancies (38.5%) in the HCG-primed group, and three pregnancies (27.3%) in the non-HCG-primed group.  (+info)

Predictive value of serum and follicular fluid leptin concentrations during assisted reproductive cycles in normal women and in women with the polycystic ovarian syndrome. (51/1493)

Leptin is an adipocyte-derived hormone which plays a central role in the regulation of body weight and energy homeostasis and in signalling to the brain that adequate energy stores are available for reproduction. Although leptin may affect reproduction by regulating the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, recent in-vitro observations indicate that leptin may also have direct intra-ovarian actions. Leptin concentrations were measured in women who succeeded in becoming pregnant within three cycles of in-vitro fertilization (IVF) or gamete intra-fallopian transfer (n = 53), in women who failed to become pregnant within three cycles (n = 50), and in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) (n = 22). It was found that lower follicular fluid leptin concentrations were a marker of assisted reproduction treatment success in normal women. Women with PCOS had higher leptin concentrations than women without such a diagnosis, but this was due to their higher body mass index (BMI). After adjustment for age and BMI, women with PCOS who became pregnant tended to have lower mean follicular fluid leptin concentrations than women with PCOS who did not succeed at becoming pregnant. Further studies exploiting the strengths of the IVF model are needed to assess whether the prognostic role for follicular fluid leptin in human reproduction is independent of other factors, and to elucidate the underlying mechanisms.  (+info)

Polycystic ovaries and recurrent miscarriage--a reappraisal. (52/1493)

The prevalence of polycystic ovaries (PCO) was established amongst 2199 consecutive women (median age 33 years; range 19-46) with a history of recurrent miscarriage (median 3; 3-14). A diagnosis of PCO was made if the ovarian volume was enlarged (>9 ml), there were >/=10 cysts of 2-8 mm in diameter in one plane and there was increased density of the stroma. In a cohort study, the prospective pregnancy outcome of 486 of the women scanned who were antiphospholipid antibody negative and who received no pharmacological treatment during their next pregnancy was studied. The prevalence of PCO was 40.7% (895/2199). The livebirth rate was similar amongst women with PCO (60.9%; 142/233) compared to that amongst women with normal ovarian morphology (58.5%; 148/253; not significant). Neither an elevated serum luteinizing hormone concentration (>10 IU/l) nor an elevated serum testosterone concentration (>3 nmol/l) was associated with an increased miscarriage rate. Polycystic ovarian morphology is not predictive of pregnancy loss amongst ovulatory women with recurrent miscarriage conceiving spontaneously. The search for a specific endocrine abnormality that can divide women with PCO into those with a good and those with a poorer prognosis for a future successful pregnancy continues.  (+info)

Leukocytes in ovarian function. (53/1493)

It has become apparent that in the ovary, the immune system contributes to the regulation of gonadal function. Leukocytes present within the ovary may constitute potential in-situ modulators of ovarian function that act through local secretion of regulatory soluble factors. These factors include numerous cytokines that largely originate by the action of immune cells within the ovary. Actual rupture of the follicle during ovulation may be dependent on tissue remodelling that is characteristic of an acute inflammatory reaction and includes mobilization of thecal fibroblasts, increased leukocyte migration, release of various mediators and loosening of connective tissue elements in the follicle wall. Both corpus luteum formation and luteal regression also involve progressive infiltration of lymphocytes and macrophages, release of chemokines and cytokines, and communication through cell adhesion molecules. In this review, we examine the evidence for the leukocytes and their products in regulation of ovarian function and relate the potential significance of these cells and substances to some ovarian disorders.  (+info)

Luteal phase start of low-dose FSH priming of follicles results in an efficient recovery, maturation and fertilization of immature human oocytes. (54/1493)

In this prospective study we investigated whether the maturation and fertilization of immature oocytes can be improved by administration of recombinant follicle stimulating hormone (rFSH) starting in the late luteal phase in two groups of women: group 1 (n = 6) women with regular menstrual cycles; and group 2 (n = 6) women with irregular cycles and polycystic ovaries (PCO) on ultrasound examination. Low-dose (37.5 IU) rFSH was commenced 11 days after LH surge during a spontaneous menstrual cycle and on the ninth day of progesterone administration in an irregular cycle. Recombinant FSH was continued until the leading follicle was approximately 10 mm in diameter. The oocytes were retrieved after withdrawing rFSH for 2-5 days. In total, 136 oocytes were recovered (group 1, 67 oocytes; group 2, 69 oocytes). Nine of the oocytes from PCO women were atretic at retrieval. Oocytes complete with cumulus cells were cultured for 44 h in complex tissue culture medium supplemented with gonadotrophins and fetal calf serum. After maturation, the cumulus cells were removed and metaphase II oocytes were injected with spermatozoa. Respectively, the oocyte maturation and fertilization rates were 64 and 72% in group 1, and 78 and 57% in group 2 (not significant). After fertilization, the zygotes (group 1, n = 22; group 2, n = 11) and cleavage stage embryos (group 1, n = 9; group 2, n = 15) were frozen in propanediol. All women except one (11/12) had approximately five zygotes or cleaved embryos frozen. The viability of in-vitro matured frozen-thawed embryos was generally poorer than that (81%) seen after conventional intracytoplasmic sperm injection, with 61% survival in group 1 and 23% in group 2. Fifteen embryo transfers resulted in one miscarriage at 6 weeks gestation. The late luteal start of low-dose rFSH yielded a good number of immature oocytes in women with both regular and irregular cycles. Two out of three of these oocytes matured and fertilized. However, cryosurvival of the zygotes and cleaved embryos was unsatisfactory and thus cryopreservation of in-vitro matured embryos may not be an optimal procedure.  (+info)

Increased risk of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension and coronary artery disease in perimenopausal women with a history of the polycystic ovary syndrome. (55/1493)

The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), arterial hypertension, coronary artery disease and the risk factors for these diseases in perimenopausal women with a history of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) treatment. A group of 28 women was selected from a large group of patients who had undergone wedge ovarian resection. A total of 752 controls was selected by age (45-59 years) from a random female population sample. There was no difference between the two groups in body mass index, waist circumference or waist-hip ratio. Both groups were found to have identical family histories of NIDDM, hypertension, and coronary artery disease and identical smoking habits. We did not find a difference between the mean concentrations of lipids and fasting glucose. The two groups did not differ in the proportions of women with elevated lipid concentrations. The prevalence of NIDDM and coronary artery disease was significantly higher in PCOS women. In conclusion, women in the general population have the same level of risk factors at perimenopausal age as PCOS women. Patients with markedly expressed clinical symptoms of PCOS made up a subgroup in the general population at high risk for developing NIDDM and coronary artery disease.  (+info)

Distribution of steroidogenic enzymes involved in androgen synthesis in polycystic ovaries: an immunohistochemical study. (56/1493)

To find an explanation for the possible working mechanism of laparoscopic ovarian electrocautery for the treatment of anovulation in polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), we evaluated the distribution of steroidogenic enzymes involved in the synthesis of ovarian androgens in surgical pathology specimens of entire polycystic ovaries. A total of 13 formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded samples of the ovaries of patients with clinically proven PCOS were immunostained with specific antibodies against cholesterol side-chain-cleavage enzyme (P450scc), 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3beta-HSD), 17alpha-hydroxylase (P450c17) and adrenal 4-binding protein (Ad4BP), a transcription factor of steroidogenic enzymes. Follicular theca cells of all ovaries demonstrated marked immunoreactivity for Ad4BP, P450scc, 3beta-HSD and P450c17. Granulosa cells of seven ovaries expressed Ad4BP, while granulosa cells of three ovaries also showed P450scc. In the granulosa cells of all ovaries, 3beta-HSD and P450c17 immunoreactivity was not observed. In the stroma, luteinized cells of most ovaries demonstrated Ad4BP, P450scc, 3beta-HSD and P450c17 immunoreactivity, but at a much lower level compared with the follicular theca cells. Non-luteinized stromal cells sporadically demonstrated Ad4BP, P450scc, 3beta-HSD and P450c17 immunoreactivity. The stromal steroidogenic cells were mainly located in the ovarian cortex, except for some hilus steroidogenic cells. These data demonstrate that in polycystic ovaries, androgens are mainly produced in the follicular theca cells and to some extent in luteinized stromal cells. This suggests that the working mechanism of laparoscopic electrocautery of the ovary is primarily explained through the reduction of ovarian hyperandrogenism by coagulation of follicular theca cells and concomitant stroma.  (+info)