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Intra-venous albumin for preventing severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndromeAboulghar M, Evers J(LH, Al-Inany HG SummaryIntra-venous albumin for preventing severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndromeOvarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) is a condition that can develop in women getting help to ovulate. If severe, it is potentially lethal. OHSS causes the ovaries to become enlarged. Fluid changes and bleeding can cause kidney failure and the need for urgent surgery to prevent shock and further damage. Human albumin is used to help restore blood volume urgently and may help prevent OHSS. The review of trials found evidence that giving human albumin can reduce the risk of severe OHSS in women who are high-risk. There is no evidence of an increased pregnancy rate.
This is a Cochrane review abstract and plain language summary, prepared and maintained by The Cochrane Collaboration, currently published in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010 Issue 1, Copyright © 2010 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.. The full text of the review is available in The Cochrane Library (ISSN 1464-780X).
This version first published online:
October 25. 1999 AbstractBackgroundOvarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) is an iatrogenic condition that occurs after the administration of human menopausal gonadotrophin (hMG) with or without gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists. OHSS is a threat to every woman undergoing ovulation induction and is potentially lethal in its severest form. Severe OHSS is characterised by growth of multiple large follicles with massive extravascular protein rich fluid shift. This may lead to hypovolaemia, haemoconcentration, oliguria, and electrolyte disturbance. Human albumin solutions are now used in the management of shock and other conditions in which restoration of blood volume is urgent, the acute management of burns, and clinical situations associated with hypoproteinaemia. Recently, a number of clinical trials with conflicting results have been reported in which albumin has been tested as a possible way for preventing the severe form of OHSS. ObjectivesTo review the effectiveness of human albumin administration in prevention of severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. Search strategyThe Menstrual Disorders and Subfertility Group literature search strategy was used to identify randomised trials that had compared the use of human albumin with placebo or no treatment in the prevention of severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. A diverse search strategy was employed, including handsearching of core journals from 1966 to November 2001, searching bibliographies of relevant trials, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychLIT and CINAHL databases, the MDSG specialised register, abstracts from North American and European meetings and contact with authors of relevant papers. Selection criteriaTrials were included if they compared the effect of human albumin with placebo or no treatment on relevant outcomes. Only randomised controlled studies were included in this review. Data collection and analysisSeven randomised controlled trials were identified, five of which met our inclusion criteria and enrolled 378 women (193 in the albumin treated group and 185 in the control group). Trials under consideration were evaluated for methodological quality and appropriateness for inclusion without consideration of their results .The five included trials were single-centre parallel randomised controlled studies. Relevant data were extracted independently by two reviewers using the standardized data extraction sheet. Validity was assessed in terms of method of randomisation, completeness of follow-up, presence or absence of crossover and co-intervention. Data Synthesis: 2x2 tables were generated for all relevant outcomes. Odds ratios were calculated using the Peto modified Mantel-Haenszel technique. Main resultsMeta-analysis of the five included trials demonstrated significant reduction in severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome on administration of human albumin (odds ratio was 0.28 (95% CI 0.11 to 0.73). Relative risk was 0.35 (0.14 - 0.87) and absolute risk reduction was 5.5. For every 18 women at risk of severe OHSS, albumin infusion will save one more case. There was no evidence of an increase in the pregnancy rate (odds ratio was 1.09, (95% CI 0.65 to 1.83) Authors' conclusionsThis review shows a clear benefit from administration of intra-venous albumin at the time of oocyte retrieval in prevention of severe OHSS in high-risk cases. Whether the NNT would justify the routine use of albumin infusion in cases at risk of severe OHSS needs to be judged by clinical decision makers. |