1. Ongoing pregnancy rates in single euploid frozen embryo transfers remain unaffected by female age: a retrospective study.
- Author
-
Lawrenz, B., Kalafat, E., Ata, B., Gallego, R. Del, Melado, L., Bayram, A., Elkhatib, I., and Fatemi, H.
- Subjects
- *
EMBRYO transfer , *HORMONE therapy , *PREGNANCY , *MENSTRUAL cycle , *BODY mass index - Abstract
Is female age a significant factor in the likelihood of an ongoing pregnancy in single euploid frozen embryo transfers (FET)? Retrospective study of 1923 single euploid FET cycles in 1464 women, either in a natural cycle or a hormone replacement therapy cycle. The primary outcome was the ongoing pregnancy rate (OPR). There were 990 (51.48%) ongoing pregnancies among 1923 included transfers. The OPR were 51.4%, 49.1%, 53.3% and 52.3% for women aged ≤35, >35–≤37, >37–≤40 and >40 years at oocyte retrieval (OCR), without a significant trend for decreasing OPR (P = 0.679). No significant differences in female age at embryo transfer (P = 0.609) and female age at OCR (P = 0.816) were found between the groups (ongoing pregnancy versus no pregnancy or miscarriage). Women who received good-quality embryos (P < 0.001), had a lower body mass index (BMI) (P < 0.001), had achieved at least one pregnancy previously (P < 0.001), and underwent natural cycle endometrial preparation (P < 0.001) were more likely to achieve an ongoing pregnancy. Multivariable regression analysis (adjusted for BMI, embryo quality and endometrial preparation) did not show a significant effect of female age at OCR on achieving an ongoing pregnancy. Compared with women aged ≤35 years, none of the age groups had significantly higher or lower OPR. A multinomial regression analysis showed that BMI, embryo quality and endometrial preparation were associated with miscarriage/no pregnancy versus ongoing pregnancy (P = 0.001, 0.001 and 0.001, respectively). Female age had no significant association with either outcome. Female age in itself does not have a substantial impact on the OPR in single euploid FET cycles, but the OPR is impacted significantly by embryo quality, BMI, previous parity, and a natural cycle endometrial preparation protocol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF