| Literature DB >> 32762698 |
Johan Smitz1, Peter Platteau2.
Abstract
It is widely known that luteinising hormone (LH) and human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) are integral in the female reproductive lifecycle. Due to the common binding site and similarity in molecular structure, they were previously thought to have overlapping roles. However, with the development of both purified urinary-derived and recombinant gonadotrophins, the individual characteristics of these molecules have begun to be defined. There is evidence to suggest that LH and hCG preferentially activate different signalling cascades and display different receptor-binding kinetics. The data generated on the two molecules have led to an improved understanding of their distinct physiological functions, resulting in a debate among clinicians regarding the most beneficial use of LH- and hCG-containing products for ovarian stimulation (OS) in assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). Over the past few decades, a number of trials have generated data supporting the use of hCG for OS in ART. Indeed, the data indicated that hCG plays an important role in folliculogenesis, leads to improved endometrial receptivity and is associated with a higher quality of embryos, while presenting a favourable safety profile. These observations support the increased use of hCG as a method to provide LH bioactivity during OS. This review summarises the molecular and functional differences between hCG and LH, and provides an overview of the clinical trial data surrounding the use of products for OS that contain LH bioactivity, examining their individual effect on outcomes such as endometrial receptivity, oocyte yield and embryo quality, as well as key pregnancy outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Assisted reproductive technology; Human chorionic gonadotrophin; Human menopausal gonadotrophin; Luteinising hormone; Ovarian stimulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32762698 PMCID: PMC7409634 DOI: 10.1186/s12958-020-00639-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biol Endocrinol ISSN: 1477-7827 Impact factor: 5.211
Fig. 1Structural similarities and differences between FSH, hCG and LH [15]. CG, chorionic gonadotrophin; COOH, carboxylic acid; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; hCG, human chorionic gonadotrophin; LH, luteinising hormone
Fig. 2hCG- and LH-induced signalling cascades via LH/CGR [19]. AC, adenylyl cyclase enzyme; AKT, protein kinase B; ATP, adenosine tri-phosphate; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; CREB, cAMP response element-binding protein; ERK1/2, extracellular regulated kinases 1 and 2; hCG, human chorionic gonadotrophin; LH, luteinising hormone; LH/CGR, luteinising hormone/choriogonadotrophin receptor; PDE, phosphodiesterase enzyme; Pl3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinases; PKA, protein kinase A
Gonadotrophin products used in ovarian stimulation [21, 68–72]
| Brand name | Urinary/recombinant | Active ingredients |
|---|---|---|
Menopur® Merional® | Urinary | Highly purified human menopausal gonadotrophin (FSH + hCG) |
Humegon® Menogon® Pergonal® Repronex® | Urinary | Human menopausal gonadotrophin (FSH + LH) |
Fostimon® Bravelle® Metrodin® Fertinex® Fertinorm® | Urinary | Urofollitropin (highly purified FSH) |
Choragon® Pregnyl® Novarel® Profasi® Predalon® Gonasi® Brevactid® Biogonadyl® Primogonyl® Endocorion® Corion® | Urinary | Human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) |
| Gonal-F® | Recombinant | Follitropin alfa (rFSH) |
Puregon® Follistim® | Recombinant | Follitropin beta (rFSH) |
| Elonva® | Recombinant | Corifollitropin alfa (long-acting rFSH) |
| Pergoveris® | Recombinant | Follitropin alfa and lutropin alfa (rFSH and rLH) |
| Luveris® | Recombinant | Lutropin alfa (rLH) |
Ovitrelle® Ovidrelle® Ovidrel® | Recombinant | Recombinant human chorionic gonadotrophin (rhCG) |
FSH follicle-stimulating hormone, hCG human chorionic gonadotrophin, LH luteinising hormone, rFSH recombinant follicle-stimulating hormone, rhCG recombinant human chorionic gonadotrophin, rLH recombinant luteinising hormone
Overview of major clinical trials comparing HP-hMG versus rFSH and rFSH/rLH- versus rFSH-containing products in ART protocols
| Patients (N) | Treatment | Testing for | Primary outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Menopur® studies | ||||
225 IU fixed dose for 5 days of either HP-hMG or rFSH alfa | Non-inferiority | OPR: 25% HP-hMG versus 22% rFSH alfa, Adverse events probably and possibly related to the medication; 14.2% HP-hMG vs 13.0% rFSH alfa OHSS: 1.9% HP-hMG vs 1.2% rFSH alfa Miscarriage: 25.4% HP-hMG vs 27.6% rFSH alfa | ||
225 IU fixed dose for 5 days of either HP-hMG or rFSH alfa, followed by individual adjustments according to the patient’s follicular response | Non-inferiority | OPR per started cycle: 27% HP-hMG vs 22% rFSH alfa (95% CI: 0.89 to 1.75, Incidence of adverse events: 51% HP-hMG vs 49% rFSH alfa OHSS: 4% HP-hMG vs 3% rFSH alfa Early pregnancy loss: 26% HP-hMG vs 32% rFSH alfa | ||
225 IU fixed starting dose for 2 days of either HP-hMG or rFSH alfa, followed by individual adjustments according to serum oestradiol levels | Non- inferiority | OPR per randomised patient: 35.0% HP-hMG (95% CI: 27.1 to 43.5) vs 32.1% rFSH alfa (95% CI: 24.5 to 40.6) Cycles cancelled due to risk of OHSS: 6.4% HP-hMG vs 3.6% rFSH alfa, Clinical OHSS: 1.64% HP-hMG vs 1.59% rFSH alfa Pregnancy loss: 0.82% HP-hMG vs 0.79% rFSH alfa | ||
150 IU fixed dose for 5 days of either HP-hMG or rFSH beta, followed by dose adjustments if required of 75 IU increments, not more than every 4 days | Non-inferiority | OPR in the PP population: 30% HP-hMG versus 27% rFSH beta, 95% CI: 3.0% (− 3.8 to 9.8) Incidence of adverse events: 39% HP-hMG vs 37% rFSH beta OHSS: 3% in each treatment group Interventions associated with excessive response or to prevent early OHSS were higher in rFSH beta group ( | ||
Patients with serum AMH ≥5 ng/mL | 150 IU fixed start dose of either HP-hMG or rFSH alfa | Non-inferiority | OPR: 35.5% HP-hMG vs 30.7% rFSH alfa, 95% CI: 4.7% (−2.7 to 12.1) OHSS: 9.7% HP-hMG versus 21.4% rFSH alfa, 95% CI: − 11.7% (− 17.3 to − 6.1), Incidence of treatment emergent adverse events: 57.7% HP-hMG vs 70.6% rFSH alfa Cumulative early pregnancy loss (fresh/frozen ET): 14.5% HP-hMG vs 25.5% rFSH alfa | |
Poor ovarian responders | 150 μg single dose of CFA followed by 300 IU HP-hMG after Day 8 until criteria for triggering ovulation were met, versus 300 IU continuous daily dose of HP-hMG | Non-inferiority | OPR per started cycle: 20.2% HP-hMG vs 15.2 CFA, 95% CI: −5 (− 15.1 to 5.0), Cancellation rate: 5.5% HP-hMG vs 3.6% CFA, | |
Poor ovarian responders | 150 μg single dose of CFA followed by ≥300 IU HP-hMG after Day 8 until criteria for triggering ovulation were met, versus 7 x fixed daily doses of 300–450 IU HP-hMG | Non-inferiority | Cumulative LBR: 16.9% HP-hMG vs 11.8% CFA + HP-hMG; | |
| Pergoveris® studies | ||||
Women aged 36–40 years | 300 IU fixed starting dose of rhFSH/rhLH from stimulation on Day 1 or rhFSH on stimulation on Days 1–5 followed by rhFSH + rhLH from stimulation Day 6. Dose adjustments were permitted from Day 6 | Non-inferiority | Number of oocytes retrieved: 9.7 rhFSH/rhLH vs 10.9 rFSH alfa, 95% CI: –3.15 to 0.59 Adverse events reported: 31.1% rhFSH/rhLH vs 32.3% rFSH alfa Serious AEs: 2% rhFSH/rhLH vs 0% rFSH alfa OHSS: 3.9% rhFSH/rhLH vs 5.1% rFSH alfa | |
Poor ovarian responders | Fixed starting dose of 300 IU rhFSH + 150 IU rhLH (Pergoveris®) or 300 IU rFSH alfa (Gonal-F®). Dose adjustments were permitted from Day 4, at increments of 75 IU of rhFSH with a maximum daily dose of 450 IU (concomitant automatic adjustments of rhLH were made with a maximum daily dose of 325 IU) | Superiority | Number of oocytes retrieved: 3.3 rhFSH/rhLH vs 3.6 rFSH alfa, 95% CI: –0.24 (−0.74 to 0.27); TEAEs: 19.9% rhFSH/rhLH vs 26.8% rFSH alfa Serious TEAEs: 1.7% rhFSH/rhLH vs 3.6% rFSH alfa, 95% CI: 0.46 (0.19 to 1.09) One incidence of OHSS in the rhFSH/rhLH group | |
AE adverse event, ART assisted reproductive technologies, CFA corifollitropin alfa, CI confidence interval, CPR clinical pregnancy rate, ET embryo transfer, HP-hMG highly purified human menopausal gonadotrophin, LBR live birth rate, OHSS ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome, OPR ongoing pregnancy rate, PP per protocol, rFSH recombinant follicle-stimulating hormone, rhFSH recombinant human follicle-stimulating hormone, rhLH recombinant human luteinising hormone, rLH recombinant luteinising hormone, TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event