Cumulative pregnancy rates are useful in counselling couples on their chance of conceiving during infertility treatment. Patients also have to be counselled about the physical and psychological stress of infertility treatment. Beside the pregnancy rates, drop-out rates are a direct, and may be the most important, marker of physician quality in an IVF programme. Data from 4102 IVF cycles in 2130 patients in Germany were analysed retrospectively. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics as well as the Kaplan-Meier procedure. A real cumulative pregnancy rate of 31.2% was achieved after four cycles with an expected cumulative pregnancy rate (ECPR) of 53.3%. Age was a significant factor regarding pregnancy rates (ECPR after four cycles: 57.1% <35 years, 44.8% > or =35 years, 35.4% > or =40 years). The drop-out rate of non-pregnant patients increased from 39.9% after the first cycle to 62.2% after the fourth cycle, indicating the enormous stress and frustration that increased during the course of treatment. The drop-out rate should be used as an important marker of quality control. The presented data give, for the first time, a good basis for this counselling procedure in Germany.
Tailoring of GnRH antagonist protocols leads to an optimization of ovarian stimulation with more oocytes retrieved despite less rhFSH used, and the same number of monitoring visits.
With a prevalence of 5%-10% the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is an exceptionally common disorder of premenopausal women. According to prospective studies, women with PCOS present abnormal glucose tolerance and diabetes mellitus in 31%-35% and 7.5%-10%, respectively. PCOS patients have a higher prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, type 2 diabetes and dyslipidaemia. The rate of spontaneous abortions as well as the risk to develop gestational or type 2 diabetes is increased in PCOS. Therefore, PCOS is not only a reproductive problem but a complex endocrine disease with important health implications. The role of the glucose metabolism in PCOS, the health consequences and possible interventions are reviewed in this article.
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