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Optimal endometrial thickness in fresh and frozen-thaw in vitro fertilization cycles: an analysis of live birth rates from 96,000 autologous embryo transfers

Authors :
Neal Mahutte
Michael Hartman
Lynn Meng
Andrea Lanes
Zhong-Cheng Luo
Kimberly E. Liu
Source :
Fertility and sterility. 117(4)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To study the effect of increasing endometrial thickness on live birth rates in fresh and frozen-thaw embryo transfer (FET) cycles.Retrospective cohort study.National data from Autologous in vitro fertilization (IVF) embryo transfer and FET cycles in Canada from the Canadian Assisted Reproductive Technology Registry Plus (CARTR Plus) database for records between January 2013 and December 2019.Thirty-three Canadians clinics participated in voluntary reporting of IVF and pregnancy outcomes to the Canadian Assisted Reproductive Technology Registry Plus database, and a total of 43,383 fresh and 53,377 frozen transfers were included.None.Clinical pregnancy, pregnancy loss, and live birth rates.In fresh IVF-embryo transfer cycles, increasing endometrial thickness is associated with significant increases in the mean number of oocytes retrieved, peak estradiol levels, number of usable embryos, clinical pregnancy rates, live birth rates, and mean term singleton birth weights, and a decrease in pregnancy loss rates. However, live birth rates plateau after 10-12 mm. In contrast, in FET cycles live birth rates plateau after the endometrium measures 7-10 mm. The improvement in live birth rates with increasing endometrial thickness was independent of patient age, timing of embryo transfer (e.g., cleavage stage vs. blastocyst stage), or the number of oocytes at retrieval.In cycles with a fresh embryo transfer, live birth rates increase significantly until an endometrial thickness of 10-12 mm, while in FET cycles live birth rates plateau after 7-10 mm. However, an endometrial thickness6 mm was associated clearly with a dramatic reduction in live birth rates in fresh and frozen embryo transfer cycles.

Details

ISSN :
15565653
Volume :
117
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Fertility and sterility
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d9e202dbdbbb4cc3339f1768ca3a77c5