TY - JOUR
T1 - Hype or hope? Ethical and practical considerations with clinical research in women with diminished ovarian reserve
AU - Gleicher, Norbert
AU - Barad, David H.
N1 - Funding Information:
The completion of this manuscript was financially supported by the Foundation for Reproductive Medicine and intramural funds from the Centre for Human Reproduction.
PY - 2012/8
Y1 - 2012/8
N2 - This communication suggests that investigations of treatments for women with diminished functional ovarian reserve (DOR) call for specific practical and ethical considerations, as women with DOR, because of limited remaining reproductive life spans, appropriately feel under time constraints. Another medical journal recently published an opinion piece on the use of dehydroepiandrosterone in women with DOR, raising important questions about what approaches should be taken to develop best available evidence in such patients. Their manuscript offers an excellent opportunity to consider ethical and clinical aspects of study design in clinical circumstances where patients have little to lose but face the promise of considerable gains in clinical pregnancy chances if effective treatments can be developed. This commentary concludes that, in such circumstances, common sense as well as ethical considerations support the introduction of new treatments into the clinical mainstream even in absence of prospectively randomized studies if lower levels of evidence are supportive of positive treatment effects.
AB - This communication suggests that investigations of treatments for women with diminished functional ovarian reserve (DOR) call for specific practical and ethical considerations, as women with DOR, because of limited remaining reproductive life spans, appropriately feel under time constraints. Another medical journal recently published an opinion piece on the use of dehydroepiandrosterone in women with DOR, raising important questions about what approaches should be taken to develop best available evidence in such patients. Their manuscript offers an excellent opportunity to consider ethical and clinical aspects of study design in clinical circumstances where patients have little to lose but face the promise of considerable gains in clinical pregnancy chances if effective treatments can be developed. This commentary concludes that, in such circumstances, common sense as well as ethical considerations support the introduction of new treatments into the clinical mainstream even in absence of prospectively randomized studies if lower levels of evidence are supportive of positive treatment effects.
KW - dehydroepiandrosterone
KW - diminished ovarian reserve
KW - ethics
KW - in-vitro fertilization
KW - poor response
KW - randomized clinical trials
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84864429327&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.rbmo.2012.04.003
DO - 10.1016/j.rbmo.2012.04.003
M3 - Comment/debate
C2 - 22683148
AN - SCOPUS:84864429327
SN - 1472-6483
VL - 25
SP - 98
EP - 102
JO - Reproductive BioMedicine Online
JF - Reproductive BioMedicine Online
IS - 2
ER -