Applying growth hormone as an adjuvant to correct poor prognosis outcomes in IVF: Study 1 compares melatonin

John L Yovich 1, 2, *, Shanthi Srinivasan 1, Mark Sillender 1, Shipra Gaur 1, Philip Rowlands 1 and Peter M Hinchliffe

1 PIVET Medical Centre Perth, Western Australia Australia 6007.
2 Department of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Curtin University Perth, Western Australia Australia 6845.
 
Research Article
GSC Biological and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 2021, 16(01), 219–238.
Article DOI: 10.30574/gscbps.2021.16.1.0207
Publication history: 
Received on 19 June 2021; revised on 20 July 2021; accepted on 24 July 2021
 
Abstract: 
This retrospective study examines the influence of recombinant growth hormone (rGH) and melatonin adjuvants on oocyte numbers, embryo utilization and live births arising from 3637 autologous IVF±ICSI treatment cycles undertaken on 2376 women across ten years (2011-2020) within a pioneer Australian facility. Despite using an FSH-dosing algorithm enabling maximal doses up to 450 IU for women with reduced ovarian reserve, younger women had significantly higher mean numbers of oocytes recovered than older women ranging from 11.1 for women <35 years to 9.4 for women aged 35-39 years reducing to 6.5 for women aged 40-44 years and 4.0 for those aged ≥45 years (p<0.0001). Overall, the embryo utilization rate was 48.5% and live birth productivity rate was 35.4 % across all ages and neither rGH nor melatonin showed any benefit on these rates, in fact, those women with nil adjuvants showed the highest live birth rate per initiated cycle (42.0% overall: p<0.0001, and 55.3% for the youngest group: p<0.001). Embryo utilization was increased marginally by rGH in those women aged 40-44 years who had high ovarian reserve (p<0.05), but this benefit did not translate into any improvement in the live birth rate. Similarly, other factors known to cause a poor prognosis, including low IGF-1 profile, recurrent implantation failure, and low oocyte numbers at OPU, showed no improvement in embryo utilization nor in live births from the adjuvants. The relevance of embryo quality was examined on 1135 women whose residual embryos after a single fresh-embryo transfer failed to develop to a suitable grade for cryopreservation. From 1727 cycles such women often displayed an improved embryo utilization rate with rGH, but not with melatonin. Even so, live birth rates were not improved by either of the adjuvants.
 
Keywords: 
In vitro fertilization [IVF]; Intracytoplasmic sperm injection [ICSI]; Recombinant growth hormone [rGH]; Melatonin; Embryo utilization; Live birth productivity rate
 
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