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Kisspeptin-10

KP-10, Metastin (45-54), Kisspeptin-10 (human), KiSS-1

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2017 pubmed 53 citations

A second dose of kisspeptin-54 improves oocyte maturation in women at high risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome: a Phase 2 randomized controlled trial.

Abbara. Ali A; Clarke. Sophie S; Islam. Rumana R; Prague. Julia K JK; Comninos. Alexander N AN; Narayanaswamy. Shakunthala S; Papadopoulou. Deborah D; Roberts. Rachel R; Izzi-Engbeaya. Chioma C; Ratnasabapathy. Risheka R; Nesbitt. Alexander A; Vimalesvaran. Sunitha S; Salim. Rehan R; Lavery. Stuart A SA; Bloom. Stephen R SR; Huson. Les L; Trew. Geoffrey H GH; Dhillo. Waljit S WS

Key Findings

  • A second kisspeptin‑54 dose increased the proportion of women achieving ≥60% mature oocyte yield from 45% to 71%.
  • The extra dose triggered an additional LH surge about 4 hours after injection, especially in women who had a weaker first response.
  • No increase in moderate OHSS was observed with the double‑dose regimen.

Practical Outcomes

  • For IVF cycles in women prone to OHSS, adding a second kisspeptin‑54 shot 10 h after the first may improve egg maturation rates without extra safety concerns. This could be incorporated into protocols that aim to use fresh embryo transfer while minimizing OHSS risk.

Summary

Giving a second injection of kisspeptin‑54 about 10 hours after the first one boosts the hormone surge that matures eggs, leading more women at high risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome to get a good number of mature eggs, and it doesn’t raise the chance of severe side effects.

Abstract

Can increasing the duration of LH-exposure with a second dose of kisspeptin-54 improve oocyte maturation in women at high risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS)? A second dose of kisspeptin-54 at 10 h following the first improves oocyte yield in women at high risk of OHSS. Kisspeptin acts at the hypothalamus to stimulate the release of an endogenous pool of GnRH from the hypothalamus. We have previously reported that a single dose of kisspeptin-54 results in an LH-surge of ~12-14 h duration, which safely triggers oocyte maturation in women at high risk of OHSS. Phase-2 randomized placebo-controlled trial of 62 women at high risk of OHSS recruited between August 2015 and May 2016. Following controlled ovarian stimulation, all patients (n = 62) received a subcutaneous injection of kisspeptin-54 (9.6 nmol/kg) 36 h prior to oocyte retrieval. Patients were randomized 1:1 to receive either a second dose of kisspeptin-54 (D; Double, n = 31), or saline (S; Single, n = 31) 10 h thereafter. Patients, embryologists, and IVF clinicians remained blinded to the dosing allocation. Study participants: Sixty-two women aged 18-34 years at high risk of OHSS (antral follicle count ≥23 or anti-Mullerian hormone level ≥40 pmol/L). Setting: Single centre study carried out at Hammersmith Hospital IVF unit, London, UK. Primary outcome: Proportion of patients achieving an oocyte yield (percentage of mature oocytes retrieved from follicles ≥14 mm on morning of first kisspeptin-54 trigger administration) of at least 60%. Secondary outcomes: Reproductive hormone levels, implantation rate and OHSS occurrence. A second dose of kisspeptin-54 at 10 h following the first induced further LH-secretion at 4 h after administration. A higher proportion of patients achieved an oocyte yield ≥60% following a second dose of kisspeptin-54 (Single: 14/31, 45%, Double: 21/31, 71%; absolute difference +26%, CI 2-50%, P = 0.042). Patients receiving two doses of kisspeptin-54 had a variable LH-response following the second kisspeptin dose, which appeared to be dependent on the LH-response following the first kisspeptin injection. Patients who had a lower LH-rise following the first dose of kisspeptin had a more substantial 'rescue' LH-response following the second dose of kisspeptin. The variable LH-response following the second dose of kisspeptin resulted in a greater proportion of patients achieving an oocyte yield ≥60%, but without also increasing the frequency of ovarian over-response and moderate OHSS (Single: 1/31, 3.2%, Double: 0/31, 0%). Further studies are warranted to directly compare kisspeptin-54 to more established triggers of oocyte maturation. Triggering final oocyte maturation with kisspeptin is a novel therapeutic option to enable the use of fresh embryo transfer even in the woman at high risk of OHSS. The study was designed, conducted, analysed and reported entirely by the authors. The Medical Research Council (MRC), Wellcome Trust & National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) provided research funding to carry out the studies. There are no competing interests to declare. Clinicaltrial.gov identifier NCT01667406. 8 August 2012. 10 August 2015.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-09-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1093/humrep/dex253

Citations

53

References

44