Elsevier

Fertility and Sterility

Volume 61, Issue 2, February 1994, Pages 314-318
Fertility and Sterility

Assisted reproductive technology
Evaluation of clomiphene citrate and human chorionic gonadotropin treatment: a prospective, randomized, crossover study during intrauterine insemination cycles

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0015-0282(16)56524-8Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open archive

Objective

To test the hypothesis that in couples undergoing IUI, actively managed cycles using clomiphene citrate (CC) stimulation, ultrasound monitoring, and hCG timing will result in increased pregnancy rate (PR) per cycle compared with unstimulated urinary LH-timed cycles.

Patients

Fifty-six couples with unexplained infertility (n = 26) or male factor infertility (n = 30) participated in the study.

Setting

Tertiary academic medical center.

Design

Prospective, randomized, crossover. Couples were randomized initially to one of the two study groups (treatment A: LH-timed IUI; treatment B: CC-stimulated, hCG-timed IUI). If no pregnancy occurred, each couple alternated between the two regimens during subsequent cycles, up to a total of four cycles.

Results

Twenty-nine couples completed the study and the analysis of 95 cycles revealed that among the male factor infertility group, one pregnancy occurred during the 26 cycles of each treatment group (PR per cycle of 3.9% for both treatment groups). In contrast, among the unexplained infertility group, there was a marked difference in the effect of treatments. During treatment A only one pregnancy occurred in 20 cycles (PR of 5% per cycle) whereas during treatment B, six pregnancies occurred in 23 cycles (PR of 26.1% per cycle).

Conclusions

If IUI is chosen as the treatment modality in unexplained infertility, the addition of active ovulation management that includes CC stimulation, ultrasound monitoring of folliculogenesis, and hCG timing of ovulation increases the PR per cycle. In couples with male infertility, PR per cycle is low and is apparently not affected by the addition of active ovulation management.

Key Words

Clomiphene citrate
intrauterine insemination
unexplained infertility
male factor infertility

Cited by (0)

* Presented at the 39th Annual Meeting of the Society for Gynecologic Investigation, March 18 to 21, 1992, San Antonio, Texas.

Reprint requests: Aydin Arici, M.D., Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.