Outcome of progesterone treatment of luteal phase inadequacy

  • Vanderbilt University Medical Center ROR

Fertility and Sterility, 41(6), 856-862

Source

Abstract

Diagnosis, choice of therapy, and pregnancy outcome were analyzed in 79 women evaluated for luteal phase inadequacy. Criteria for the diagnosis were established, and groups at risk for luteal inadequacy were identified. Treatment choices, tailored to the suspected cause, included progesterone suppositories in 54 women, with 23 pregnancies and 19 deliveries; clomiphene citrate in 6 women, with 2 pregnancies and deliveries; and combined treatment in 7 women, with 5 pregnancies and 4 deliveries. Eight women received no treatment, including three who underwent endometrial biopsy in the cycle of conception and who subsequently delivered. These data suggest that careful diagnosis and the proper choice of treatment are important, and that progesterone supplementation may result in improved pregnancy outcome for patients with infertility and pregnancy wastage who have luteal phase inadequacy.

Topics

progesterone suppositories luteal phase inadequacy treatment pregnancy outcome, luteal phase defect progesterone supplementation infertility, Wentz luteal phase inadequacy progesterone treatment, clomiphene citrate versus progesterone luteal phase deficiency, luteal phase inadequacy diagnosis criteria treatment choice, progesterone supplementation pregnancy outcome luteal defect, endometrial biopsy luteal phase defect diagnosis fertility, luteal phase inadequacy recurrent pregnancy loss treatment, combined clomiphene progesterone luteal phase support, infertility luteal insufficiency tailored therapy outcomes

Cite this article

Wentz, A. C., Herbert, C. M., Maxson, W. S., & Garner, C. H. (1984). Outcome of progesterone treatment of luteal phase inadequacy. *Fertility and sterility*, *41*(6), 856-862.

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