The Star Malaysia - Star2

Better to freeze it?

In IVF, frozen embryos may lead to more live births than fresh embryos.

- By DEBORAH NETBURN

MOST women who do IVF are impregnate­d with a fresh embryo. However, a new study suggests that using a previously frozen and then thawed embryo may have a better success rate.

In a randomized trial of 1,508 women undergoing IVF for the first time, the researcher­s found that 49.3% of those who used frozen embryos gave birth to a baby, compared with 42% of those who used fresh embryos.

The work, led by Dr Zi- Jiang Chen of the centre for reproducti­ve medicine at Shandong Provincial Hospital in China, was published recently in the New England Journal of Medicine.

More than five million people worldwide got their start in life thanks to in vitro fertilisat­ion, according to the study authors.

The process begins when doctors harvest eggs from a woman and mix them with sperm to create a fertilised egg, or zygote.

After a few days, the zygote begins to divide, becoming an embryo. This embryo can be implanted in a woman’s uterus right away or frozen for use later.

The new study is one of the largest yet to look at the difference between using fresh embryos and frozen embryos in IVF.

The data were collected from 14 medical centres throughout China from 2013 to 2015, and all participan­ts were followed throughout the duration of their pregnancy.

The authors found little difference in pregnancy rates among women who used fresh embryos and those who used frozen ones. However, they did see a significan­t difference in how likely these women were to stay pregnant.

Nearly 33% of women who had a fresh embryo transfer lost the baby over the course of their pregnancy, compared with 22% of those who were implanted with a frozen embryo.

Frozen embryos were also associated with a higher birth weight in babies.

All the women who participat­ed in the study were diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome, or PCOS. This condition results in women having several small fluid- filled sacks in their ovaries that look like cysts.

It is often associated with obesity, as well as increased levels of male hormones that can cause excessive hair growth and acne.

Women who have PCOS also have irregular periods and cannot get pregnant except through IVF.

Participan­ts in the study were randomly split into two groups. One group received IVF with embryos from eggs that had been harvested and mixed with sperm just three days before implantati­on.

The other group waited a month between harvesting and implantati­on. Their eggs were mixed with sperm and then frozen three days later. A month later, after the woman’s uterine lining had been shed and replaced, the frozen embryos were thawed and then implanted.

The fact that all the participan­ts in the study suffered from the same infertilit­y condition has pluses and minuses when it comes to interpreti­ng the study results, said Dr Owen Davis, associate director of in vitro fertilisat­ion at the Center for Reproducti­ve Medicine at Cornell Medical College in the US.

On one hand, the homogeneou­s population meant that the study conclusive­ly showed that frozen embryos lead to more live births than fresh embryos in women who have PCOS. However, it is unclear that these findings can be generalise­d across the wider population.

“Most people doing IVF don’t have PCOS,” said Davis, who was not involved in the study. “I would speculate that the findings are translatab­le, but we can’t say that for sure.”

The study was not designed to identify why frozen embryos might work better than fresh embryos. However, the authors suggest the success of the frozen- then- thawed transfer might allow a woman’s reproducti­ve system to reset after exposure to all the hormones necessary to harvest the eggs.

The authors also note that there were two stillbirth­s and five neonatal deaths in the frozen embryo group and none in the fresh group. Although this number is only of borderline significan­ce and could be due to chance, it is still disturbing and the researcher­s say it warrants attention.

“It could be a statistica­l blip, but they were responsibl­e and fair with how they dealt with it,” Davis said. “It’s a small red flag and something that does require further investigat­ion.”

Finally, the research team suggests that their findings should lead to a new way of looking at IVF success rates.

Currently, registries like those maintained by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Society for Assisted Reproducti­ve Technology look at clinical pregnancy rate. Because a healthy baby is the ultimate goal of all IVF procedures, the authors say that looking at live birthrates are a better way to measure success. – Los Angeles Times/ Tribune News Service

 ?? — tns ?? Frozen goodness: the study found that nearly 33% of women who had a fresh embryo transfer lost the baby over the course of their pregnancy, compared with 22% of those who were implanted with a frozen embryo.
— tns Frozen goodness: the study found that nearly 33% of women who had a fresh embryo transfer lost the baby over the course of their pregnancy, compared with 22% of those who were implanted with a frozen embryo.

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