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Analysis of the Composition of the Vaginal Microbiota During IVF Treatment and Correlation With Serum Progesterone Level on the Day of Embryo Transfer (MICROFIV)

C

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nīmes

Status

Completed

Conditions

IVF

Treatments

Other: Blood test
Other: Vaginal swab

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04820985
NIMAO/2020-01/SH-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

The composition of the vaginal microbiota varies throughout a woman's life and is sensitive to hormonal and environmental factors. Specifically, hormonal treatments necessary in the medically assisted procreation (MAP) processes can influence the vaginal microbiota. New sequencing techniques have been used to characterize the vaginal microbiota, demonstrating that the microbiota could be divided into 5 classes. The composition of the vaginal microbiota seems to have an implication in the evolution of a pregnancy after IVF. It is therefore essential to have more data on the evolution of the vaginal microbiota at the different stages of IVF treatment and to analyze whether this evolution can be predictive of the success of embryo implantation. Good endometrial progesterone impregnation is an essential prerequisite for ensuring embryo implantation. Indeed, supporting the luteal phase through vaginal progesterone is an essential step in IVF protocols to ensure synchronization between endometrial maturation and embryonic age. However, the serum progesterone level on the day of embryo transfer varies widely between patients. Several factors such as age, vaginal mucosa trophicity, estrogen impregnation and sexual activity are known to affect the vaginal absorption of progesterone. The treatments and vaginal examinations performed during the IVF procedure could also have an impact on the constitution of the vaginal microbiota. The hypothesis of this research is that there is an alteration in the vaginal microbiota during the IVF process which may alter the absorption of vaginal progesterone, with an impact on the failure or success of embryo implantation.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 40 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient in round 1 or 2 of IVF or IVF-ICSI with transfer of a fresh embryo with a normal preimplantation assessment, without antibiotic treatment in the 3 months preceding the sample.
  • The patient must have given their free and informed consent and signed the consent form
  • The patient must be a member or beneficiary of a health insurance plan

Exclusion criteria

  • Use of antibiotics in the 3 months preceding the sample.
  • Patient presenting an anomaly in the implantation assessment.
  • Presence of uterine malformation, hydrosalpinx, chronic vaginosis.
  • Patient undergoing a protocol to study endometrial receptivity.
  • Patient of African American, African or Latin American origin (patients born to two parents of Hispanic origin) as people of African and Hispanic origin have a type IV flora vs people of Caucasian origins who have type I, II, III and V of the Ravel classification .
  • Cancellation of the procedure for various reasons (stimulation failure, collection failure, fertilization failure or embryonic segmentation).
  • Patient taking a freeze-all approach (freezing of the embryos) for various causes (risk of ovarian hyperstimulation, increase in progesterone, too thin endometrium, etc.).
  • The subject is participating in a category 1 interventional study, or is in a period of exclusion determined by a previous study
  • The subject refuses to sign the consent
  • It is impossible to give the subject informed information
  • The patient is under safeguard of justice or state guardianship

Trial design

60 participants in 1 patient group

Women undergoing IVF
Treatment:
Other: Blood test
Other: Vaginal swab

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Stéphanie Huberlant

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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