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Pregnancies and live births after trophectoderm biopsy and preimplantation genetic testing of human blastocysts.

Authors :
McArthur SJ
Leigh D
Marshall JT
de Boer KA
Jansen RP
Source :
Fertility and sterility [Fertil Steril] 2005 Dec; Vol. 84 (6), pp. 1628-36.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Objective: To compare multiple-cell trophectoderm biopsy for preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) from day-5 blastocysts with previously published experience with day-3 cleavage-stage embryos.<br />Design: Retrospective review of laboratory and clinical experience.<br />Setting: Sydney IVF, a private clinic in Australia.<br />Patient(s): Preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) patients age < 44 years with at least one IVF blastocyst suitable for biopsy, recruited from January 2002 through August 2004.<br />Intervention(s): Biopsy of trophectoderm from blastocysts on day 5 or 6, with same-day PGD for mutation testing, translocation testing, aneuploidy screening or sex selection. Spare, normal biopsied blastocysts were cryostored for possible later transfer.<br />Main Outcome Measure(s): Fetal heart-positive pregnancy rate and accumulating live birth rate after adding results from biopsied fresh and frozen blastocysts for particular couples.<br />Result(s): In 231 started PGD treatment cycles, unambiguous results were obtained from 974 of 1,050 biopsied blastocysts (93%); all blastocysts survived the biopsy procedure by reconstitution of their blastocele. One hundred nineteen women (median age, 36 years) have had 127 blastocysts transferred fresh (fetal heart-positive implantation rate, 41%). Of 146 blastocysts cryostored, 27 have been thawed (all with > 50% cell survival) and 24 transferred (implantation rate, 26%). To date, 53 pregnancies have been delivered or are ongoing, with an additional 4 clinical miscarriages (7%) and 6 subclinical miscarriages (total miscarriage rate, including biochemical pregnancies, 16%). There were no twin pregnancies.<br />Conclusion(s): With technically appropriate blastocyst culture and freezing, blastocyst biopsy and cryostorage and later transfer of biopsied blastocysts is shown to be a practical and probably preferable path to preimplantation genetic testing of embryos compared with cleavage-stage embryo biopsy, being accompanied by a high implantation rate (and hence more conducive to elective single embryo transfer) and by a low rate of twinning and miscarriage.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1556-5653
Volume :
84
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Fertility and sterility
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16359956
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2005.05.063