A Randomized Trial of Progesterone in Women with Recurrent Miscarriages
Coomarasamy A, Williams H, Truchanowicz E, Seed PT, Small R, Quenby S, Gupta P, Dawood F, Koot YE, Bender Atik R, Bloemenkamp KW, Brady R, Briley AL, Cavallaro R, Cheong YC, Chu JJ, Eapen A, Ewies A, Hoek A, Kaaijk EM, Koks CA, Li TC, MacLean M, Mol BW, Moore J, Ross JA, Sharpe L, Stewart J, Vaithilingam N, Farquharson RG, Kilby MD, Khalaf Y, Goddijn M, Regan L, Rai R
The New England Journal of Medicine, 373(22), 2141-2148
Progesterone is essential for the maintenance of pregnancy. However, whether progesterone supplementation in the first trimester of pregnancy would increase the rate of live births among women with a history of unexplained recurrent miscarriages is uncertain.
Methods
We conducted a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial to investigate whether treatment with progesterone would increase the rates of live births and newborn survival among women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage. We randomly assigned women with recurrent miscarriages to receive twice-daily vaginal suppositories containing either 400 mg of micronized progesterone or matched placebo from a time soon after a positive urinary pregnancy test (and no later than 6 weeks of gestation) through 12 weeks of gestation. The primary outcome was live birth after 24 weeks of gestation.
Results
A total of 1568 women were assessed for eligibility, and 836 of these women who conceived naturally within 1 year and remained willing to participate in the trial were randomly assigned to receive either progesterone (404 women) or placebo (432 women). The follow-up rate for the primary outcome was 98.8% (826 of 836 women). In an intention-to-treat analysis, the rate of live births was 65.8% (262 of 398 women) in the progesterone group and 63.3% (271 of 428 women) in the placebo group (relative rate, 1.04; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.94 to 1.15; rate difference, 2.5 percentage points; 95% CI, -4.0 to 9.0). There were no significant between-group differences in the rate of adverse events.
Conclusions
Progesterone therapy in the first trimester of pregnancy did not result in a significantly higher rate of live births among women with a history of unexplained recurrent miscarriages. (Funded by the United Kingdom National Institute of Health Research; PROMISE Current Controlled Trials number, ISRCTN92644181.).
progesterone recurrent miscarriage randomized controlled trial PROMISE, vaginal progesterone supplementation first trimester recurrent miscarriage, Coomarasamy progesterone recurrent miscarriage live birth rate, micronized progesterone 400mg vaginal suppository miscarriage prevention, unexplained recurrent miscarriage progesterone versus placebo RCT, PROMISE trial progesterone recurrent pregnancy loss, first trimester progesterone supplementation live birth outcomes, luteal phase support recurrent spontaneous abortion efficacy, progesterone therapy recurrent miscarriage no significant benefit, double-blind placebo controlled trial progesterone miscarriage
PMID 26605928 26605928 DOI 10.1056/NEJMoa1504927 10.1056/NEJMoa1504927
Cite this article
Coomarasamy, A., Williams, H., Truchanowicz, E., Seed, P. T., Small, R., Quenby, S., Gupta, P., Dawood, F., Koot, Y. E. M., Bender Atik, R., Bloemenkamp, K. W. M., Brady, R., Briley, A. L., Cavallaro, R., Cheong, Y. C., Chu, J. J., Eapen, A., Ewies, A., Hoek, A., . . . Rai, R. (2015). A Randomized Trial of Progesterone in Women with Recurrent Miscarriages. *The New England journal of medicine*, *373*(22), 2141-2148. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1504927
Coomarasamy A, Williams H, Truchanowicz E, Seed PT, Small R, Quenby S, et al. A Randomized Trial of Progesterone in Women with Recurrent Miscarriages. N Engl J Med. 2015;373(22):2141-2148. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1504927
Coomarasamy, A., et al. "A Randomized Trial of Progesterone in Women with Recurrent Miscarriages." *The New England journal of medicine*, vol. 373, no. 22, 2015, pp. 2141-2148.
Keywords
Abortion, Habitual/prevention & Control, Administration, Intravaginal, Adult, Body Mass Index, Double-Blind Method, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Live Birth, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, First, Progesterone/therapeutic Use, Treatment Failure, Progesterone
Reproductive Endocrinology Precis, 2012Fertility and sterility
The majority of miscarriages are sporadic and most result from genetic causes that are greatly influenced by maternal age. Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) is defined by two or more failed clinical preg...
Infertility > Recurrent Pregnancy Loss > Evaluation GuidelinesPregnancy > Complications > Recurrent MiscarriageDiagnostics > Reproductive > Recurrent Pregnancy Loss Workup
Mørch LS et al., 2017The New England Journal of Medicine
BACKGROUND: Little is known about whether contemporary hormonal contraception is associated with an increased risk of breast cancer.
METHODS: We assessed associations between the use of hormonal cont...
Contraception/Comparison > Side Effects > Breast Cancer RiskContraception/Comparison > Hormonal Contraception > Combined Oral ContraceptivesContraception/Comparison > Hormonal Contraception > Progestin-Only Methods
Rolnik DL et al., 2017The New England Journal of Medicine
BACKGROUND: Preterm preeclampsia is an important cause of maternal and perinatal death and complications. It is uncertain whether the intake of low-dose aspirin during pregnancy reduces the risk of pr...