Kjotrod 2011.
Methods | RCT Setting: 8 infertility centres in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden Method of randomisation: hospital pharmacy used a computer‐generated list Blinding: double Number randomised: 150 |
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Participants | Summary: metformin vs placebo in non‐obese PCOS women Inclusion criteria: PCOS (Rotterdam criteria), aged < 38 years, BMI < 28 kg/m2, scheduled to undergo fertility treatment, minimum of 1 year infertility Exclusion criteria: contraindicated for rFSH, FSH > 10 IU/L, liver or kidney disease, diabetes, fasting blood glucose ≥ 7.0 mmol/L, alcoholism, drug abuse, hyperprolactinaemia, abnormal thyroid function tests, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, androgen‐secreting tumours, Cushing's syndrome; had received oral steroid hormones, cimetidine, anticoagulants, erythromycin or other macrolides. A 1‐month washout if woman previously had metformin. Baseline characteristics of each group: metformin (n = 74) vs placebo (n = 76)
Dropouts: 1 person withdrew from placebo group |
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Interventions | Main intervention: metformin 500 mg/d gradually increased to 2000 mg/d within first 2 weeks of treatment vs placebo Duration: 12 weeks Co‐interventions: diet and lifestyle advice were given to all patients |
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Outcomes | Primary: gastrointestinal side effects Secondary: clinical pregnancy rate |
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Notes | Did not exclude alternative causes of infertility such as male factor, tubal disease, endometriosis The study continued with fertility treatment for those women who did not conceive spontaneously with metformin or placebo. Endocrine parameters measured but results not recorded Women who did not conceive spontaneously after metformin vs placebo, went on to have IVF. We have included up to the IVF stage for analysis in this review. |
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Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Computer random‐number generator |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Pharmacy generated number and packaging of medications was identical |
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Participants and personnel were blinded |
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Investigators were blinded |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Dropouts stated with reasoning where one participant withdrew consent after randomisation |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Low risk | The primary outcome relevant to this review, spontaneous pregnancy, was clearly reported. |
Other bias | Low risk | No evidence of other bias |