Elevated serum progesterone levels before frozen embryo transfer (FET) in artificially prepared cycles with vaginal or vaginal plus subcutaneous progesterone have no negative impact on reproductive outcomes, as reported in a study.
Researchers looked at a total of 3,183 FET cycles under hormonal replacement therapy. A total of 1,360 cycles corresponded to frozen homologous embryo transfer (hom-FET), 1,024 were euploid ET (eu-FET) after preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidies (PGT-A), and 799 cycles were frozen heterologous ET (het-FET).
Luteal phase was covered using 200 mg/8 h of vaginal micronized progesterone either alone or in combination with a daily subcutaneous injection of 25 mg of progesterone.
There were 1,360 cycles that corresponded to frozen homologous embryo transfer (ET). All women had adequate serum progesterone levels (≥10.6 ng/ml) before the procedure (median, 14.39 ng/ml). Progesterone levels were significantly higher in the group under vaginal plus subcutaneous progesterone vs vaginal progesterone (15.96 vs 14.09; p<0.001).
Clinical pregnancy, miscarriage, and live birth rates did not differ by the use of vaginal or vaginal plus subcutaneous progesterone for each of the following groups: hom-FET, eu-FET, and het-FET). Live birth rates were similar among patients in the highest centile of serum progesterone levels (22.33 ng/ml) and the rest of the women (43.9 percent vs 41.3 percent; p=0.381).
Those with progesterone levels ≥p90 had lower body mass index than women with lower progesterone levels (<p90; 22.62 vs 23.32; p=0.009). Analysis that grouped the women in deciles according to serum progesterone levels showed no differences in live birth rates (p=0.938).