## Clomiphene Resistance and Management Strategy **Key Point:** When a patient fails to respond to maximum tolerated doses of clomiphene citrate (150 mg/day), she is classified as clomiphene-resistant. The standard next step is NOT dose escalation beyond 150 mg, but rather switching to an alternative agent. **Why Letrozole is Preferred:** - Letrozole (an aromatase inhibitor) is now considered a first-line alternative to clomiphene for WHO Group II anovulation, particularly in clomiphene-resistant cases - It has a shorter half-life (45 hours vs. clomiphene's 30 days), reducing antiestrogenic effects on endometrium and cervical mucus - Studies show comparable or superior ovulation and pregnancy rates compared to clomiphene, especially in PCOS and non-PCOS anovulation - Letrozole does not deplete estrogen receptors, preserving endometrial thickness **Clinical Pearl:** In WHO Group II anovulation with normal FSH and normal prolactin, clomiphene or letrozole monotherapy is the first-line approach. Gonadotropins are reserved for clomiphene/letrozole-resistant cases after confirming adequate ovarian reserve and excluding other causes. **High-Yield:** The 2023 ASRM and ESHRE guidelines recommend letrozole as a reasonable first-line alternative to clomiphene, especially when clomiphene resistance is documented. **Mnemonic:** **CLOMIPHENE RESISTANCE → LETROZOLE FIRST** (before jumping to gonadotropins).
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