Tuesday, May 31, 2016

PCOS and Infertility: Pretreatment Weight loss hikes the live birth and ovulation rate in overweight and obese patients.

Couples are often puzzled when they face infertility as well as modifiable morbidity (overweight and obesity) limiting the chances of successful conception and healthy pregnancy thereof.   It’s   a tough choice to opt between starting the infertility treatment or correcting the underlying morbidity.

Obesity is associated with delayed conception, increased pregnancy loss, higher rates of preeclampsia and preterm labor and metabolic syndrome leading to perinatal and neonatal morbidity and mortality.
Expert opinion have always advocated that obese women with PCOS delay infertility therapy and pursue lifestyle modification, but has lacked high quality evidence in support of the claim. There are no data on the optimum weight loss as well as duration of preconception treatment.

Dr. Richard S. Legro, MD, from Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania, and colleagues recently  published their study findings in online edition of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.

“We found that pretreatment lifestyle modification for weight loss, with or without concurrent OC therapy, was associated with a significant improvement in the rate of ovulation and an even greater increase in live birth rate than immediate fertility treatment with clomiphene. Further, ovulation and live birth rates were nearly identical between pretreatment with oral contraceptives vs immediate treatment with clomiphene, suggesting that there is little fertility benefit to pretreatment with hormonal suppression, alone or in combination with lifestyle modification” opined the researchers.

Two very good trials recently were concurrently conducted to demonstrate significant benefits of lifestyle modification on ovulation and live births rate in obese women with PCOS.  The trials are The Treatment of Hyperandrogenism vs. Insulin Resistance in Infertile PCOS Women or OWL PCOS study and The Pregnancy in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome II or PPCOS II study.

Both the trials were multicentric conducted concurrently by the researchers.

The OWL PCOS was a randomized open labeled two site study constituting 149 women, diagnosed with PCOS by Modified Rotterdam criteria. The women were assigned to 3 groups to receive either 16-week Preconception treatment with continuous oral contraception, lifestyle modification or combination of both before going to receive 4 cycles of clomiphene and timed intercourse.

The PPCOS II study was double blind, with 750 women receiving   either 5 cycles of ovulation induction with letrozole or clomiphene citrate and timed intercourse. No study participants received any life style modification earlier.

A secondary post hoc analysis was done by combining data from both the studies. An intentional similar design, with same inclusion/exclusion criteria’s and use of clomiphene for ovulation induction made it feasible to combine the data from the two trials.

The researchers extracted the data for all women in the PPCOS II study in the clomiphene arm who met the BMI criteria of the OWL PCOS study. So, they had data on 187 women from the PPCOS II study and 142 women from the OWL PCOS study.

The primary outcome was live birth, while predetermined secondary outcomes were conception, ovulation and pregnancy loss rates.

It was seen that earlier lifestyle modification leading to weight loss, irrespective of hormonal treatment with OCP resulted in significant improvement in ovulation rate and greater increase in live birth rates as compared to starting immediate clomiphene treatment.

In those patients who only received clomiphene the ovulation rate was 44.7% (277/619), and the live birth rate was 10.2% (19/187) while patients who underwent weight loss before fertility treatment the ovulation rate was 62.0% (80/129), and the live birth rate was 25.0% (12/48).

Patients who underwent lifestyle modification (In the OWL PCOS study, as well as patients in the Combined group of the OWL PCOS study) had 2.5-fold increase in live births. Patients in the Lifestyle modification and Combined groups also had a 1.4-fold increase in cumulative ovulation rate (P .003 and P .001, respectively) compared to treatment with only clomiphene in PPCOS II.
Use of OCP before starting clomiphene did not have any significant effect on ovulation or live birth rates.

Comparing the results at the end of first cycle, only patients who lost weight in OWL PCOS had a significantly improved chance of pregnancy and live birth in the first ovulation induction cycle compared to the first ovulation induction cycle in direct clomiphene group. The study also demonstrated that improving the quality of ovulation is as important as improving the rate of ovulation to achieve a higher live birth rate.  

"Our research holds significant implications for current practice, and supports the concept of delaying fertility treatment to pursue lifestyle modification in overweight/obese women with PCOS. It provides momentum to test this concept more completely and prospectively in properly designed and adequately powered multicenter studies to generate Level I evidence for the practice," the authors explain.

"Future studies may also want to utilize other ovulation induction agents in the infertility treatment phase such as low dose gonadotropin or letrozole, which tend to have greater success rates combined with comparable rates of multiple pregnancy and congenital anomalies as clomiphene," the authors conclude. 

Disclosure Statement: Dr. Legro reports consulting fees from Euro screen, Astra Zeneca, Clarus Therapeutics, Takeda, Kindex and research funding from Ferring and Astra Zeneca. Dr. Estes and Dr. Schlaff reports research funding from AbbVie. Dr. Dokras reports consulting fees from JDS Therapeutics. Mr. Kunselman reports ownership of Merck stock. Dr. Sarwer reports consulting fees from BAROnova, EnteroMedics, and Ethicon. The other investigators report no disclosures. 

References:
http://press.endocrine.org/doi/pdf/10.1210/jc.2016-1659



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