Follicle-stimulating hormone modestly predicts improvement in semen parameters in men with infertility treated with clomiphene citrate.

Scott D LundyJohnathan DoolittleNicholas J FarberStephanie NjemanzeCarlos Munoz-LopezSarah C Vij
Published in: Andrologia (2022)
Clomiphene citrate is a commonly prescribed empiric medical therapy for male infertility, but outcomes data and response rates remain incompletely understood. We retrospectively reviewed our single-institutional experience of infertile men prescribed clomiphene. Clomiphene treatment in the final cohort of 140 men was associated with a modest increase in median sperm concentration from 2.2 to 2.5 million/ml (p < 0.001). A total of 46/140 (33%) of men upgraded according to World Health Organization concentration categories. Clomiphene treatment in 26/113 (23%) of previously ineligible men became eligible for intrauterine insemination. Using both univariate and multivariable regression, pre-treatment follicle-stimulating hormone was inversely associated with change in semen concentration with clomiphene treatment. On binary logistic regression, follicle-stimulating hormone level was inversely related to World Health Organization concentration category upgrade (p = 0.01). Unfortunately, 17/140 (12%) of men paradoxically worsened on clomiphene, but no predictors for this could be identified. In summary, clomiphene citrate confers a clinically relevant but modest benefit in a subset (1/3 rd ) of infertile men, particularly those with lower pre-treatment follicle-stimulating hormone levels. Men with elevated follicle-stimulating hormone over 15 IU/ml are less likely to benefit from treatment and should be counselled on other relevant treatment alternatives.