4 results on '"Mignini Renzini, M"'
Search Results
2. Sperm donation: an alternative to improve post-ICSI live birth rates in advanced maternal age patients.
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Renzini, M Mignini, Canto, M Dal, Guglielmo, M C, Garcia, D, Ponti, E De, Marca, A La, Vassena, R, Buratini, J, Mignini Renzini, M, Dal Canto, M, De Ponti, E, and La Marca, A
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HUMAN artificial insemination , *MATERNAL age , *FERTILIZATION in vitro , *BIRTH rate , *SPERMATOZOA , *FERTILITY clinics , *MALE infertility , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Study Question: Can sperm donation increase live birth rates following ICSI in advanced maternal age (AMA) patients?Summary Answer: Sperm donation increases the live birth rate in AMA ICSI cycles.What Is Known Already: In ICSI practice, sperm donation has been predominantly applied to overcome male infertility. The involvement of paternal age and lower sperm quality in the severe reduction in fertility observed in AMA patients remains to be clarified.Study Design, Size, Duration: Retrospective multicenter cohort study including data generated between 2015 and 2019 from 755 ICSI cycles achieving a fresh embryo transfer, of which 337 were first homologous cycles (normozoospermic partner sperm and homologous oocytes) and 418 were first sperm donation cycles (donor sperm and homologous oocytes). The association of sperm origin (partner vs donor) with live birth was assessed by multivariate analysis in non-AMA (<37 years, n = 278) and AMA (≥37 years, n = 477) patients, separately, including in the model all variables previously found to be associated with live birth in a univariate analysis (number of MII oocytes recovered, number of embryos transferred, and maternal age). ICSI outcomes were compared between sperm donation and homologous cycles in overall, non-AMA and AMA patients.Participants/materials, Setting, Methods: The study was conducted in three fertility clinics and included 755 Caucasian patients aged 24-42 years undergoing their first homologous or sperm donation ICSI cycle achieving a fresh embryo transfer.Main Results and the Role Of Chance: The multivariate analysis revealed that sperm donation was positively associated with the likelihood of a live birth independently of all other variables tested in AMA (P = 0.02), but not in non-AMA patients. Live birth, delivery, and miscarriage rates differed substantially between sperm donation and homologous AMA cycles; live birth and delivery rates were 70-75% higher (25.4% vs 14.5% and 22.5% vs 13.5%, respectively; P < 0.01), while miscarriage occurrence was less than half (18.0% vs 39.5%; P < 0.01) in sperm donation compared to homologous AMA cycles.Limitations, Reasons For Caution: This study is limited by its retrospective nature, differences in patients profiles between sperm donation and homologous-control groups and varying proportion of donor cycles between fertility centers, although these variations have been controlled for in the statistical analysis.Wider Implications Of the Findings: The findings suggest that sperm donation increases live birth rates while reducing miscarriage occurrence in AMA patients, and thus may be a valid strategy to improve ICSI outcomes in this growing and challenging patient group.Study Funding/competing Interest(s): N/A.Trial Registration Number: N/A. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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3. A novel transnational fresh oocyte donation (TOD) program based on transport of frozen sperm and embryos.
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Marca, A La, Canto, M Dal, Buccheri, M, Valerio, M, Renzini, M Mignini, Rodriguez, A, Vassena, R, La Marca, A, Dal Canto, M, and Mignini Renzini, M
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FERTILITY clinics , *EMBRYOS , *BLASTOCYST , *OVUM donation , *FROZEN semen , *EMBRYO transfer , *PARTURITION - Abstract
Study Question: What is the clinical efficacy of an oocyte donation program based on the transportation of frozen semen and embryos between two countries?Summary Answer: The transnational oocyte donation program is efficient and reliable and it could provide a first-line strategy to overcome the lack of donors in some countries.What Is Known Already: While there is increasing need for donated oocytes, in many countries the availability of donors is still insufficient to cover the therapeutic demands, and patients are referred abroad for treatment. Since embryo cryopreservation is reliable and efficient, we propose a strategy based on frozen embryos instead of frozen oocytes to satisfy the increasing demand for cross border oocyte donation.Study Design, Size, Duration: This is a retrospective cohort study including 630 patients treated from December 2015 to July 2017.Participants/materials, Setting, Methods: Infertile women were treated with elective vitrified-thawed embryo shipping and embryo transfer (ET) between two IVF clinics, one in Spain and one in Italy.Main Results and the Role Of Chance: A total of 2617 embryos were created for the 630 patients and the survival rate after warming was 98.5%. After the first ET the live birth rate (LBR) was 30.6%. In 476 patients (75.5%), embryos were transferred at the cleavage stage (Day 2 or 3) and the LBR was 29.2%. Vitrified blastocysts were available for 154 patients (24.5%) and the LBR was 35%. Among patients who did not achieve a pregnancy after the first frozen ET (FET), 92.5% had at least one frozen embryo for successive procedures. 213 patients underwent a second FET. The LBR at the second FET was 30%. The cumulative LBR at the end of the observation period was 39.3%.Limitations, Reasons For Caution: The study design was retrospective. A direct comparison with vitrified oocyte donors cycle and subsequent fresh ET would have permitted to compare this strategy versus the current standard based on vitrified gametes.Wider Implications Of the Findings: The LBR found in our study is more than acceptable and seems to be higher than what reported with vitrified oocytes. The transnational fresh oocyte donation program may have several advantages over the shipment of vitrified oocytes: similarly to the fresh oocyte donation program it allows for personalized care in oocyte recipient, which is provided by assigning a flexible number of oocytes, and at the same time it maintains the benefit of a frozen ART program permitting scheduling flexibility. The TOD program is efficient and may be proposed as a first-line strategy for distance and inter-countries oocyte donation programs.Study Funding, Competing Interest(s): None.Trial Registration Number: NA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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4. Focused time-lapse analysis reveals novel aspects of human fertilization and suggests new parameters of embryo viability.
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Coticchio, G., Renzini, M. Mignini, Novara, P. V., Lain, M., De Ponti, E., Turchi, D., Fadini, R., Dal Canto, M., and Mignini Renzini, M
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CONCEPTION , *EMBRYOLOGY , *HUMAN reproduction , *CELL survival , *BLASTOMERES , *CELL morphology , *INFERTILITY treatment , *OVUM physiology , *CYTOPLASM , *BLASTULA , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DYNAMICS , *FERTILIZATION in vitro , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *OVUM , *RESEARCH , *ZYGOTES , *EVALUATION research , *FETAL development , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Study Question: Can focused application of time-lapse microscopy (TLM) lead to a more detailed map of the morphokinetics of human fertilization, revealing novel or neglected aspects of this process?Summary Answer: Intensive harnessing of TLM reveals novel or previously poorly characterised phenomena of fertilization, such as a cytoplasmic wave (CW) preceding pronuclear formation and kinetics of pronuclear chromatin polarization, thereby suggesting novel non-invasive biomarkers of embryo quality.What Is Known Already: In recent years, human preimplantation development has been the object of TLM studies with the intent to develop morphokinetic algorithms able to predict blastocyst formation and implantation. Regardless, our appreciation of the morphokinetics of fertilization remains rather scarce, currently including only times of polar body II (PBII) emission, pronuclear appearance and fading, and first cleavage. This is not consistent with the complexity and importance of this process, calling for further TLM studies aimed at describing previously unrecognized or undetected morphokinetic events and identifying novel developmental biomarkers.Study Design, Size, Duration: The study involved a retrospective observation by TLM of the fertilization process in 500 oocytes utilized in consecutive ICSI cycles carried out in 2016. A maximum of five fertilized oocytes per patients were included in the analysis to reduce possible patient-specific biases. Oocytes of patients with different diagnoses of infertility where included in the analysis, while cases involving cryopreserved gametes or surgically retrieved sperm were excluded.Participants/materials, Settings, Methods: Microinjected oocytes where assessed by a combined TLM-culture system (Embryoscope). Oocytes that were not amenable to TLM assessment, due to excess of residual corona cells or inadequate orientation for the observation of PBII emission, were not analysed. We identified and monitored 28 parameters relevant to meiotic resumption, pronuclear dynamics, chromatin organization, and cytoplasmic/cortical modifications. Times (T) were expressed as mean ± SD hours post-insemination (p.i.) and analysed, where appropriate, by Paired T Student or Fisher's exact tests.Main Results and Role Of Chance: PBII emission was occasionally followed (4.3% of cases) by the transient appearance of a protrusion of the cell surface, the fertilization cone (FC), probably resulting from interaction of the male chromatin with the oocyte cortex. Pronuclear formation was always preceded by a radial CW originating from the initial position of the male pronucleus (PN) and extending towards the oocyte periphery. The appearance of the CW followed a precise sequence, occurring always 2-3 h after PBII emission and shortly before PN appearance. Male and female PN appeared virtually simultaneously at approximately 6.2 h p.i. However, while the female PN always formed cortically and near the site of emission of the PBII, the initial position of the male PN was cortical, intermediate, or central (15.2%, 31.2% and 53.6%, respectively). PN juxtaposition involved rapid and straight movement of the female PN towards the male PN. In addition, the initial position of male PN formation was predictive of the position of PN juxtaposition. It was also observed that nucleolar precursor bodies (NPBs) aligned along the juxtaposition area and this happened considerably earlier for the female PN (8.2 ± 2.6 vs.11.2 ± 4.1 h, P = 0.0001). Although it occurred rarely, displacement of juxtaposed PN to the cortex was strongly associated (P < 0.0001) with direct cleavage into three blastomeres at the first cell division. The times of PN breakdown and first cleavage showed a very consistent trend, occurring earlier or progressively later depending on whether initial male PN positioning was central, intermediate or cortical, respectively. Finally, time intervals between discrete fertilization events were strongly associated with embryo quality on Day 3. For example, longer intervals between disappearance of the cytoplasmic halo and PN breakdown were highly predictive of reduced blastomere number and increased fragmentation (P = 0.0001).Large Scale Data: N/A.Limitations, Reason For Caution: Some of the morphokinetic parameters assessed in this study may require better definition to reduce inter-operator annotation variability.Wider Implications Of the Findings: To our knowledge, overall, these data represent the most detailed morphokinetic description of human fertilization. Many of the illustrated parameters are novel and may be amenable to further elaboration into algorithms able to predict embryo quality, as suggested by the findings presented in this study.Study Funding/competing Interests: None. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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