Research question: To determine whether the transdermal route is equal or superior to the oral route, when preparing the endometrium with oestrogens for embryo transfer.
Design: Prospective, randomized controlled trial; 140 patients randomized; the pills group followed a protocol with oestradiol valerate pills and the patches group followed a protocol with oestradiol hemihydrate patches. The primary variable was endometrial thickness on day 10 ± 1 of treatment. Secondary variables were endometrial thickness on day 15 ± 1 of treatment, patient satisfaction, plasma levels of oestradiol, rates of pregnancy, miscarriage and delivery. Endometrial thickness was measured on day 10 ± 1 of the cycle, if the lining was 7 mm or less in thickness, another measurement was made on day 15 ± 1. Blood oestradiol levels were analysed on the day the endometrial lining was greater than 7 mm (day 10 ± 1 or day 15 ± 1). Patients completed a survey to evaluate comfort and side-effects.
Results: The patches group achieved significantly thicker endometrium by the first check-up on day 10 ± 1 (7.6 mm versus 7.0 mm; P = 0.026), with lower blood levels of oestradiol (159.2 pg/ml versus 237.1 pg/ml; P < 0.001) when the endometrial thickness was over 7mm. The pills group considered the treatment more comfortable, with less side-effects. No significant differences in the rates of pregnancy, miscarriage or live birth were found.
Conclusions: Transdermal oestrogen treatment allows patients to reach a higher endometrial thickness after 10 days of treatment, with lower plasma levels of oestradiol, although it is not tolerated as well.
Keywords: Embryo transfer; Endometrium; Oral estrogens; Transdermal estrogens.
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