Successful pregnancy after ovulation induction with human chorionic gonadotropin in a woman with selective luteinising hormone deficiency.
Lizandra Moura Paravidine SasakiBruno Ramalho de CarvalhoAdelino Amaral SilvaAlberto Moreno ZaconetaMiriam da Silva WanderleyLuiz Augusto Casulari Roxo da MottaAdriana Lofrano-PortoPublished in: Human reproduction (Oxford, England) (2021)
Selective LH deficiency has been described in several men, but only in two women who presented normal pubertal development but secondary amenorrhoea due to anovulation. Despite its rarity, this condition represents a valuable model for studying the processes regulated by FSH or LH during late folliculogenesis and ovulation in humans. A woman previously diagnosed with selective LH deficiency due to a homozygous germline splice site mutation in LHB (IVS2 + 1G→C mutation) was submitted to an individualised ovarian induction protocol, first with recombinant LH and then with highly purified urinary hCG. Ovarian follicle growth and ovulation were achieved, and a healthy baby was born after an uneventful term pregnancy. The treatment described herein demonstrates that the clinical actions of exogenous LH or hCG in inducing late-stage follicular development in women with deficient LH production or performance might be interchangeable or inevitable, once FSH-dependent early follicular growth is assured.