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Impact of Vaginal Microbiome on Vaginal Absorption of Exogenous Progesterone: a Pilot Study. (PROGEBIOMA)

I

Instituto Valenciano de Infertilidad, IVI VALENCIA

Status

Completed

Conditions

Infertility, Female

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: VAGINAL PH VALUE
Diagnostic Test: SERUM OESTRADIOL LEVELS
Diagnostic Test: SERUM PROGESTERONE LEVELS
Diagnostic Test: MICROBIOME GENETIC ANALYSIS

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05161338
2110-VLC-095-EL

Details and patient eligibility

About

Is already demonstrated that around 30% of patients undergoing an artificial cycle with vaginal progesterone do not reach a minimum threshold value of serum progesterone levels on the day of embryo transfer. Women with serum progesterone levels below this threshold have 20% lower ongoing pregnancy and live birth rates, decreasing their chances of success. However, the cause of this high heterogeneity in exogenous vaginal progesterone absorption among our patients remains unknown. It has been suggested that vaginal microbiome, and vaginal pH (due to its impact in microbiota growth), may explain the differences in vaginal progesterone absorption. The aim of the present pilot study is to assess if certain vaginal conditions, such as its microbiome status or its pH level, might affect vaginal progesterone absorption (measured by serum progesterone levels) and, in turn, the chances of success. In order to evaluate it, a prospective cohort unicentric study will be conducted in IVI RMA Valencia (Spain). Infertile patients undergoing an embryo transfer in the context of an artificial cycle when using vaginal progesterone will be recruited. Serum progesterone and estradiol levels, microbiome genetic analysis in vaginal samples and vaginal pH will be measured both on the embryo transfer-scheduling day and on the embryo transfer day.

Full description

Currently, as part of routine clinical practice serum progesterone levels were meassured of women undergoing an ET in the context of an artificial cycle. These blood tests are usually performed around 2 hours before ET, thus results are available before their departure of the clinic. In the event of detecting low serum progesterone levels, an extra dose of exogenous subcutaneous progesterone is given for LPS.

There is not knowing about the reason of this heterogeneity in progesterone absorption, and one plausible hypothesis is vaginal microbiome. In the event of proving a significant association between vaginal microbiome and serum progesterone levels on the day of ET, and in particular if these levels are below or above the delimited threshold, it would be possible to individualize LPS in several patients in a more direct manner.

It is true that our current clinical practice, giving subcutaneous progesterone, is capable of equaling OPR of women with serum progesterone levels below 8.8 ng/ml on the ET day to those with values above this threshold applying the exact same approach to all patients. This study could be the next step towards an iLPS, to know the reason of the lower progesterone levels, and treat it directly, instead of moving to the need of a daily injection of progesterone which is costly and not patient friendly. Furthermore, vaginal microbiome may also have an impact in the subsequent OPR, even though serum progesterone levels were over 8.8 ng/ml. If this is the case, the analisys in advance the patient's vaginal microbiome will allow to treat the patient accordingly in order to increase the results of the ART treatment.

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The subject must provide written informed consent prior to any study related procedures
  • Women ≤50 years old
  • BMI ≤ 25 kg/m2
  • Adequate endometrial thickness (>6.5mm) and pattern (Triple A structure) in the proliferative phase

Exclusion criteria

  • Uterine Pathology, adnexal pathology
  • Systemic diseases -

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 1 patient group

FROZEN EMBRYO TRANSFER
Experimental group
Description:
Women who undergo an artificial cycle for frozen embryo transfer and receive luteal phase support.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: VAGINAL PH VALUE
Diagnostic Test: SERUM OESTRADIOL LEVELS
Diagnostic Test: SERUM PROGESTERONE LEVELS
Diagnostic Test: MICROBIOME GENETIC ANALYSIS

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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