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Augusto P. Chong

Other affiliations: Mount Sinai Hospital
Bio: Augusto P. Chong is an academic researcher from University of Connecticut. The author has contributed to research in topics: Human chorionic gonadotropin & Pregnancy rate. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 160 citations. Previous affiliations of Augusto P. Chong include Mount Sinai Hospital.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The collected data indicate the absolute need for adequate standardization of this important test, which is the basis upon which the clinician makes the important decision of implicating the male partner in the couple's infertility problem.
Abstract: Sixty-four laboratories from Connecticut, Massachusetts, and California were involved in a comparison of the types of semen analyses offered. The collected data indicate that there is a wide range of normal values for each parameter considered in a semen analysis. Very few laboratories gave simple and precise instructions for collection of the specimen. In many instances there was no record of the collection time or of the arrival time of the specimen at the laboratory. Most laboratories did not report motility or forward progression at time intervals, and abnormal morphology was not broken down according to the types of abnormalities involved. These data indicate the absolute need for adequate standardization of this important test, which is the basis upon which the clinician makes the important decision of implicating the male partner in the couple's infertility problem.

63 citations

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TL;DR: The data reveal a direct relationship between IBW and the amount of hMG needed to induce ovulation and/or pregnancy; however, in the presence of chronic hypoestrogenic conditions, it is expected that these patients will need higher amounts of h MG, regardless of body weight.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The CO2 laser, directed via the microscope or the freehand piece of the articulated arm, was utilized to vaporize focal endometriosis implants, to excise endometrial cysts, and to lyse pelvic adhesions in 54 patients.

28 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that this new classification of CC responses will help to identify and more efficiently manage patients undergoing this form of therapy.

10 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The definition presented here represents the first realistic attempt by the scientific community to standardize the definition of poor ovarian response (POR) in a simple and reproducible manner and is uniformly adapted as the 'minimal' criteria needed to select patients for future clinical trials.
Abstract: The definition presented here represents the first realistic attempt by the scientific community to standardize the definition of poor ovarian response (POR) in a simple and reproducible manner. POR to ovarian stimulation usually indicates a reduction in follicular response, resulting in a reduced number of retrieved oocytes. It has been recognized that, in order to define the poor response in IVF, at least two of the following three features must be present: (i) advanced maternal age or any other risk factor for POR; (ii) a previous POR; and (iii) an abnormal ovarian reserve test (ORT). Two episodes of POR after maximal stimulation are sufficient to define a patient as poor responder in the absence of advanced maternal age or abnormal ORT. By definition, the term POR refers to the ovarian response, and therefore, one stimulated cycle is considered essential for the diagnosis of POR. However, patients of advanced age with an abnormal ORT may be classified as poor responders since both advanced age and an abnormal ORT may indicate reduced ovarian reserve and act as a surrogate of ovarian stimulation cycle outcome. In this case, the patients should be more properly defined as 'expected poor responder'. If this definition of POR is uniformly adapted as the 'minimal' criteria needed to select patients for future clinical trials, more homogeneous populations will be tested for any new protocols. Finally, by reducing bias caused by spurious POR definitions, it will be possible to compare results and to draw reliable conclusions.

1,347 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Weight loss should be considered as a first option for women who are infertile and overweight, and the cost savings of the programme were considerable.
Abstract: Obesity affects ovulation, response to fertility treatment, pregnancy rates and outcome. In this prospective study, a weight loss programme was assessed to determine whether it could help obese infertile women, irrespective of their infertility diagnosis, to achieve a viable pregnancy, ideally without further medical intervention. The subjects underwent a weekly programme aimed at lifestyle changes in relation to exercise and diet for 6 months; those that did not complete the 6 months were treated as a comparison group. Women in the study lost an average of 10.2 kg/m2, with 60 of the 67 anovulatory subjects resuming spontaneous ovulation, 52 achieving a pregnancy (18 spontaneously) and 45 a live birth. The miscarriage rate was 18%, compared to 75% for the same women prior to the programme. Psychometric measurements also improved. None of these changes occurred in the comparison group. The cost savings of the programme were considerable. Prior to the programme, the 67 women had had treatment costing a total of A$550,000 for two live births, a cost of A$275,000 per baby. After the programme, the same women had treatment costing a total of A$210,000 for 45 babies, a cost of A$4600 per baby. Thus weight loss should be considered as a first option for women who are infertile and overweight.

729 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Several protocols have been proposed for clinical management of low ovarian response in IVF and natural cycle IVF has produced results which are comparable with those obtained with stimulated cycles in true poor responders.
Abstract: Poor response is not a rare occurrence in ovarian stimulation. Although not fully accepted, the most dominant criteria for poor ovarian response are small numbers of follicles developed or oocytes retrieved, and low estradiol (E2) levels after the use of a standard stimulation protocol. There is no ideal predictive test as the poor responder is revealed only during ovulation induction; however, increased levels of day 3 FSH and E2 as well as decreased levels of inhibin B can be used to assess ovarian reserve. Several protocols have been proposed for clinical management of low ovarian response in IVF. Although high doses of gonadotrophins have been used by the vast majority of authors, results have been controversial and prospective randomized studies have shown little or no benefit. The few available relevant studies do not indicate that recombinant FSH improves outcome. Flare-up GnRH agonist protocols (including all dosage varieties) produce better results than standard long luteal protocols. Luteal initiation GnRH agonist ‘stop’ protocols were shown to improve ovarian response according to prospective studies with historical controls, but this was not confirmed by well-designed prospective, randomized, controlled studies. The few available data obtained with GnRH antagonists have not shown any benefits. Adjuvant therapy with growth hormone (GH) or GH-releasing factors results in no significant improvement. The use of corticosteroids reduces the incidence of poor ovarian response in women undergoing IVF treatment. The limited data obtained with nitric oxide donors are encouraging. Pretreatment with combined oral contraceptives prior to stimulation may help ovarian response. No benefit was observed with standard use of ICSI or assisted hatching of zona pellucida. Finally, natural cycle IVF has produced results which are comparable with those obtained with stimulated cycles in true poor responders. Well-designed, large-scale, randomized, controlled trials are needed to assess the efficacy of these different management strategies.

338 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: No single regimen will benefit all poor responders, and of the varied strategies proposed, those that seem to be more uniformly beneficial are microdose Gn RH-a flare and late luteal phase initiation of a short course of low-dose GnRH-a discontinued before COH.

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An external quality control study for semen analysis was performed involving 10 andrology laboratories in geographically separate locations and the coefficients of variation for sperm counts varied with sperm concentrations showing highest variability for low and lowest for high concentrations.

203 citations