Life (Mar 2023)

Successful Treatment of Infertility in a Patient with Probable 17 Hydroxylase Deficiency and Particularities of Association with Adrenal Autoimmunity—A Case Report and Review of the Literature

  • Alice Ioana Albu,
  • Mirela Elena Iancu,
  • Dragos Nicolae Albu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life13040921
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 921

Abstract

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Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 17-hydroxylase deficiency (17OHD) is a rare disease accounting for less than 1% of cases of CAH. In female patients, fertility is severely affected mainly due to constantly increased progesterone affecting endometrium receptivity and implantation. The optimal treatment for infertility in these patients is not clearly established, with only a few recent case reports of successful pregnancies available in the literature. Hereby, we present the case of an infertile female patient with 17OHD who obtained pregnancy through an in vitro fertilization (IVF) freeze-all strategy and particularities of association with adrenal autoimmunity. A 32-year-old infertile female patient was referred for infertility evaluation and treatment. She had normal sex development and menstrual history with oligomenorrhea alternating with normal menstrual cycles. During the evaluation, a reduced ovarian reserve and obstruction of the left fallopian tube were identified, and IVF treatment was recommended. During a controlled ovarian stimulation for IVF, increased values of serum progesterone were observed; thus, all the embryos were frozen and additional tests were performed. Increased values of 17-hydroxyprogesteron, 11-deoxycorticosteron, and adrenocorticotropic hormones in association with low basal and stimulated serum cortisol, testosterone, androstenedione, and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate were found, supporting the presence of 17OHD. She started treatment with oral hydrocortisone given at 20 mg/day but, because follicular phase serum progesterone remained high, hydrocortisone was replaced by an oral dexamethasone treatment of 0.5 mg/day, followed by the normalization of serum progesterone. A thawed blastocyst was transferred after preparation with oral estradiol at 6 mg/day and intravaginal progesterone at 600 mg/day under continuous suppression of endogenous progesterone production with a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist and oral dexamethasone. The patient became pregnant and delivered two healthy girls at term. One year after delivery, the presence of 21-hydroxylase antibodies was detected, which might explain the particularities of adrenal steroids in our patient. Our case report demonstrates that a patient with 17OHD can become pregnant through IVF and the transfer of thawed embryos in a subsequent cycle under continuous suppression of adrenal and ovarian progesterone production.

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