| Literature DB >> 32338123 |
Alberto Vaiarelli1, Danilo Cimadomo1, Cecilia Petriglia2, Alessandro Conforti3, Carlo Alviggi3, Nicolò Ubaldi4, Sergio Ledda5, Susanna Ferrero1, Laura Rienzi1, Filippo Maria Ubaldi1.
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that follicular development occurs in a wave-like model during the ovarian cycle, where up to three cohorts of follicles are recruited to complete folliculogenesis. This understanding overtakes the previous dogma stating that follicles grow only during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Therefore, in in vitro fertilization (IVF), novel protocols regarding ovarian stimulation have been theorized based on the use of gonadotrophins to prompt the growth of antral follicles at any stage of the menstrual cycle. These unconventional protocols for ovarian stimulation aim at a more efficient management of poor-prognosis patients, otherwise exposed to conflicting outcomes after conventional approaches. DuoStim appears among these unconventional stimulation protocols as one of the most promising. It combines two consecutive stimulations in the follicular and luteal phases of the same ovarian cycle, aimed at increasing the number of oocytes retrieved and embryos produced in the short time-frame. This protocol has been suggested for the treatment of all conditions requiring a maximal and urgent exploitation of the ovarian reserve, such as oncological patients and poor responders at an advanced maternal age. At present, data from independent studies have outlined the consistency and reproducibility of this approach, which might also reduce the drop-out between consecutive failed IVF cycles in poor-prognosis patients. However, the protocol must be standardized, and more robust studies and cost-benefit analyses are needed to highlight the true clinical pros and cons deriving from DuoStim implementation in IVF.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced maternal age; Bologna criteria; DuoStim; PGT; double ovarian stimulation; fertility preservation; poor-prognosis patients; poor-responder patients; reduced ovarian reserve
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32338123 PMCID: PMC7721001 DOI: 10.1080/03009734.2020.1734694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ups J Med Sci ISSN: 0300-9734 Impact factor: 2.384
Figure 1.PRISMA 2009 flow diagram.
Summary of the clinical evidence produced via double stimulation in the same ovarian cycle to date.
| Study | Design | Inclusion criteria | Number of patients | FPS protocol | Trigger | LPS protocol | To avoid the LH surge | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xu and Li ( | Case report | Poor-responder patient 41 y old | 1 | CC (50–100 mg/day) + FSH 150 IU/day | GnRH-a (triptorelin 0.2 mg) and hCG 10,000 IU | CC (50–100 mg/day) + FSH 150 IU/day | Ibuprofen | LPS might rescue unsuccessful oocyte retrievals after FPS |
| Kuang et al. ( | Pilot | AFC ≤6; ≤5 oocytes retrieved from a previous cycle; history of ovarian surgery; FSH level: 10–19 IU/L; maternal age ≥40 y | 38 | CC 25 mg/day; LE 2.5 mg/day (4 days); HMG 150 IU/day | GnRH-a 0.5 mg | LE 2.5 mg/day + HMG 225 IU/day | Ibuprofen 0.6 g + MPA | Higher chance to retrieve oocytes in a single ovarian cycle |
| Moffat et al. ( | Commentary | Fertility preservation and conditions requiring larger cohorts of oocytes | NR | r-FSH 300 IU/day | GnRH-a (triptorelin 0.2 mg) | r-FSH 300 IU/day | GnRH-ant | Increased number of oocytes collected in less than 30 days with a patient-friendly approach |
| Ubaldi et al. ( | Proof of concept | AMH ≤1.5 ng/mL; AFC ≤6; ≤5 oocytes retrieved from a previous cycle; maternal age ≥35 y | 51 | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 75 IU/day | GnRH-a (buserelin 50 IU) | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 75 IU/day | GnRH-ant | LPS increased the number of patients producing at least 1 euploid blastocyst and undergoing a transfer in a single ovarian cycle |
| Wei et al. ( | Retrospective | Maternal age >40 y; prior history of poor response; ≤3 oocytes retrieved; AFC <6. | 23 | CC 50 mg/day + LE 2.5 mg/day (5 days) + HMG 150 IU/day | GnRH-a 0.1 mg (FPS) and hCG 10,000 IU (LPS) | CC 50 mg/day + LE 2.5 mg/day (5 days) + HMG 150 IU/day | MPA | More oocytes collected after LPS with respect to FPS |
| Zhang et al. ( | Retrospective | POR defined according to the Bologna criteria | 153 | CC 50 mg/day + HP-FSH 150 IU/day | GnRH-a (triptorelin 0.2 mg) | CC 50 mg/day + HP-FSH 150–225 IU/day | Ibuprofen 300 mg every 6 h from GnRH-a injection to the day of follicle aspiration | LPS results in more COC, MII, and zygotes; LPS-derived embryos resulted in higher IR |
| Tsampras et al. ( | Pilot | Fertility preservation in oncological patients | 10 oncological patients | HMG 150–450 IU/day | hCG 5000 IU | HMG 150–450 IU/day | GnRH-ant | Increased number of oocytes vitrified after COS with no delay in starting chemotherapy |
| Vaiarelli et al. ( | Observational | AMH ≤1.5 ng/mL; AFC ≤6; ≤5 oocytes retrieved from a previous cycle; maternal age ≥35 y | 128 | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 75–150 IU/day | GnRH-a (buserelin 50 IU) | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 75–150 IU/day | GnRH-ant | No difference in the embryological outcomes between FPS and LPS (fertilization, blastulation, and euploidy rates) |
| Cardoso et al. ( | Retrospective | Previously failed IVF treatment(s) | 13 | r-FSH 225 IU/day + HMG 75 IU/day | GnRH-a (triptorelin 0.2 mg) | r-FSH 225 IU/day + HMG 75 IU/day | GnRH-ant | Higher number of oocytes in a single ovarian cycle |
| Liu et al. ( | Case-control | Women ≥38 y | 116 | r-FSH 150–300 IU/day + r-LH 75–150 IU/day | r-hCG 250 mg | HMG 225 IU/day | Long agonist (13pz); Short agonist (27pz); GnRH-ant (53pz); MPA (23pz) | Higher number of oocytes in a single ovarian cycle |
| Cimadomo et al. ( | Paired case-control study | AMH ≤1.5 ng/mL; AFC ≤6; ≤5 oocytes retrieved from a previous cycle; maternal age ≥35 y | 188 | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 75–150 IU/day | GnRH-a (buserelin 50 IU) | r-FSH 300 IU/day r-LH 75–150 IU/day | GnRH-ant | LPS generates larger cohorts of oocytes with comparable developmental and chromosomal competence than paired-FPS-derived ones |
| Zhang et al. ( | Retrospective | Poor responders fulfilling the Bologna criteria | 61 | CC 50–100 IU/day (5 days) + HMG 75–150 IU/day | r-hCG 250 mg | CC 50–100 IU/day (5 days) + HMG 75–150 IU/day | Dufaston | More oocytes retrieved but lower MII rate after LPS than after FPS; similar LBR and CPR |
| Rashtian and Zhang ( | Retrospective | FSH level >15 IU/mL; AFC 1–8; 1 previous failed conventional IVF cycle | 69 | CC 50 mg/day + LE 2.5 mg/day (5 days) + FSH 75 IU/day | GnRH-a (FPS)/r-hCG (LPS) | CC 50 mg/day + LE 2.5 mg/day (5 days) + FSH 75 IU/day | GnRH-ant | No difference in the number of oocytes retrieved between FPS and LPS |
| Madani et al. ( | Prospective | Poor responders fulfilling the Bologna criteriab | 104 | CC 25 mg/day + LE 2.5 mg/day (4 days) + HMG 150 IU/day | GnRH-a | LE 2.5 mg/day + HMG 225 IU/day | Ibuprofen 0.6 g + MPA | Fertilization rate and number of frozen embryos higher after FPS than LPS; double stimulation is a time-saving and patient-friendly regimen |
| Jin et al. ( | Retrospective | Poor responders according to Bologna criteriab | 76 | CC 50 mg/day + LE 100 mg/day or 5 mg/day (5 days) + HMG 150–300 IU/day | GnRH-a (triptorelin 0.1 mg) or hCG 5000–10,000 IU | CC 50–100 mg/day + HMG 150–300 IU/day | GnRH-ant | More oocytes and embryos obtained, as well as lower cancellation rate within an ovarian cycle with double stimulation |
| Vaiarelli et al. ( | Multicenter observational | AMH ≤1.5 ng/mL; AFC ≤6; ≤5 oocytes retrieved from a previous cycle; maternal age ≥35 y | 310 | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | GnRH-a (buserelin 50 IU) | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | GnRH-ant | Higher rate of patients obtaining at least 1 euploid blastocyst in a single ovarian cycle thanks to the contribution of LPS |
| Sighinolfi et al. ( | Commentary | Fertility preservation in oncological patients | NR | r-FSH 200 IU/day or HMG 200 IU/day | GnRH-a | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 75 IU/day | GnRH-ant | Increased number of oocytes collected and vitrified in a short time-frame |
| Lin et al. ( | Pilot | Poor responders fulfilling the Bologna criteriab | 60 | HMG 225 IU/day + CC 100 IU/day | r-hCG + GnRH-ant | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | MPA 10 mg | More oocytes and day-3 embryos after LPS than after FPS |
| Hatirnaz et al. ( | Retrospective study | POI | 51 | Single dose of r-FSH 225 IU the day of trigger | hCG 10,000 IU | LE 5 mg/day + single dose of r-FSH 225 IU the day of trigger | hCG 10,000 IU | Dual stimulation compared to subsequent conventional stimulations reduced the number of oocyte retrievals performed to obtain at least 2 cleavage stage embryos |
| Alsbjerg et al. ( | Case series | Poor responders fulfilling the Bologna criteria (<42 y)b | 54 | Corifollitropin-alfa + r-FSH 300–375 IU/day OR r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | GnRH-a (FPS) or hCG (LPS) | Corifollitropin-alfa + r-FSH 300–375 IU/day OR r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | GnRH-ant | More oocytes retrieved after LPS; lower cancellation rate after double stimulation |
| Vaiarelli et al. ( | Case series | Poor responders fulfilling the Bologna criteria | 100 patients choosing DuoStim versus 194 choosing conventional COS | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | GnRH-a (buserelin 50 IU) | r-FSH 300 IU/day + r-LH 150 IU/day | GnRH-ant | DuoStim prevents drop-out after a first failed attempt, thereby increasing the CLBR per ITT |
Long agonist: controlled ovarian stimulation protocol with long GnRH agonist; short agonist: controlled ovarian stimulation protocol with short GnRH agonist.
Poor responders (fulfilling Bologna criteria): according to the Bologna criteria the patients should have at least two of these characteristics: (i) maternal age (≥40 years); (ii) a previous ovarian response ≤3 oocytes with a conventional stimulation protocol; (iii) an abnormal ovarian reserve test (i.e., AFC 5–7 follicles or AMH 0.5–1.1 ng/mL).
Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) defined as FSH levels higher than 40 IU/L, up to two ovarian follicles (2–9 mm) at the baseline pelvic scan, presence of oligomenorrhea/amenorrhea, and low levels of AMH <0.30 pg/mL.
AFC: antral follicle count; AMH: anti-Müllerian hormone; CC: clomiphene citrate; CLBR: cumulative LBR; COC: cumulus oocyte complex; COS: controlled ovarian stimulation; CPR: cumulative pregnancy; FPS: follicular phase stimulation; FSH: follicle-stimulating hormone; GN : gonadotrophin; GnRH-a: GnRH agonist trigger; GnRH-ant: controlled ovarian stimulation protocol with antagonist protocol; hCG: human chorionic gonadotrophin; HMG: human menopausal gonadotrophin; HP-FSH: highly purified FSH; IR: implantation rate; ITT: intention-to-treat; IVF: in vitro fertilisation; LBR: live birth rate; LE: letrozole; LH: luteinizing hormone; LPS: luteal phase stimulation; MII: metaphase II; MPA: medroxyprogesterone acetate; NR: not reported; POI: premature ovarian insufficiency; r-FSH: recombinant FSH; r-hCG: recombinant hCG; r-LH: recombinant LH.