Oral versus intramuscular progesterone for in vitro fertilization: a prospective randomized study

Fertility and sterility, 71(4), 614-618

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00515-9 PMID 10202868 Source

Abstract

Objective

To evaluate the efficacy of oral micronized progesterone compared with IM progesterone in oil for luteal support in patients undergoing IVF who are treated with a GnRH agonist.

Design

Randomized prospective clinical trial.

Setting

University-based IVF center. PATIENT(S): Women <40 years of age who were undergoing IVF with luteal GnRH pituitary down-regulation. INTERVENTION(S): Patients were randomized to receive either oral micronized progesterone (200 mg three times daily) or IM progesterone (50 mg daily). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Progesterone levels at standardized days 21 and 28, and pregnancy and embryo implantation rates. RESULT(S): Day 21 progesterone levels were 77.6+/-13.2 ng/mL in the IM group and 81.5+/-16.2 ng/mL in the oral group. Day 28 progesterone levels were 76.3+/-15.0 ng/mL in the IM group and 53.6+/-10.1 ng/mL in the oral group. The clinical pregnancy rates were 57.9% and 45.8% for the IM and oral groups, respectively. The implantation rate per embryo was significantly higher in the IM group (40.9%) than in the oral group (18.1%). CONCLUSION(S): When used according to our protocols, oral progesterone and IM progesterone result in comparable levels of circulating progesterone. However, oral progesterone results in a reduced implantation rate per embryo.

Topics

oral progesterone IVF, intramuscular progesterone luteal support, progesterone administration routes IVF, luteal phase support IVF, micronized progesterone embryo implantation, progesterone supplementation IVF, oral vs IM progesterone, implantation rate progesterone, luteal support pregnancy rates, progesterone levels IVF cycle

Cite this article

Licciardi, F. L., Kwiatkowski, A., Noyes, N. L., Berkeley, A. S., Krey, L. L., & Grifo, J. A. (1999). Oral versus intramuscular progesterone for in vitro fertilization: a prospective randomized study. *Fertility and sterility*, *71*(4), 614-618. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00515-9

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