26 research outputs found

    Manipulation of the follicular phase: Uterodomes and pregnancy - is there a correlation?

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    BACKGROUND: Manipulation of the follicular phase uterine epithelium in women undergoing infertility treatment, has not generally shown differing morphological effects on uterine epithelial characteristics using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and resultant pregnancy rates have remained suboptimal utilising these manipulations. The present study observed manipulation of the proliferative epithelium, with either 7 or 14 days of sequential oestrogen (E) therapy followed by progesterone (P) and assessed the appearance of pinopods (now called uterodomes) for their usefulness as potential implantation markers in seven women who subsequently became pregnant. Three endometrial biopsies per patient were taken during consecutive cycles: day 19 of a natural cycle - (group 1), days 11/12 of a second cycle after 7 days E then P - (group 2), and days 19/22 of a third cycle after 14 days E then P - (group 3). Embryo transfer (ET) was performed in a subsequent long treatment cycle (as per Group 3). RESULTS: Seven pregnancies resulted in seven viable births including one twins and one miscarriage. Analysis of the individual regimes showed 5 days of P treatment to have a higher correlation for uterodomes in all 3 cycles observed individually. It was also observed that all 7 women demonstrated the appearance of uterodomes in at least one of their cycles. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that manipulation of the follicular phase by shortening the period of E exposure to 7 days, does not compromise uterine epithelial morphology and we add weight to the conclusion that uterodomes indicate a receptive endometrium for implantation

    Vitrification of human mature oocytes in clinical practice

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    Oocyte cryopreservation has long been the focus of unsuccessful efforts to perfect its clinical application. Lately, vitrification has been shown to provide high degrees of success by different research groups. This review attempts to address the efficiency of oocyte vitrification in clinical practice through an analysis of reports of IVF cycles in which embryo transfers have been conducted with vitrified metaphase-II human oocytes

    The human blastocyst regulates endometrial epithelial apoptosis in embryonic adhesion

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    The implanting blastocyst must appose and adhere to the endometrial epithelium and, subsequently, invade it. Locally regulated uterine epithelial apoptosis induced by the embryo is a crucial step of the epithelial invasion in rodents. To address the physiological relevance of this process in humans, we investigated the effect of single human blastocysts on the regulation of apoptosis in cultured human endometrial epithelial cells (hEEC) in both apposition and adhesion phases of implantation Here, we report a co-ordinated embryonic regulation of hEEC apoptosis. In the apposition phase, the presence of a blastocyst rescues hEEC from the apoptotic pathway. However, when the human blastocyst adheres to the hEEC monolayer, it induces a paracrine apoptotic reaction. Fas ligand (Fas-L) was present at the embryonic trophoectoderm. Fas was localized at the apical cell surface of hEEC, and flow cytometry revealed that 60% of hEEC express Fas. Neutralizing adhesion assays revealed that the Fas/Fas-L death system may be an important mechanism to cross the epithelial barrier, which is crucial for embryonic adhesion, and the manipulation of this system could have potential clinical implications as an interceptive mechanism

    Consistent and predictable delivery rates after oocyte vitrification : an observational longitudinal cohort multicentric study

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    Background: An efficient method for cryopreservation of human oocytes may offer solutions to legal and ethical problems in routine infertility programs and may also be used for fertility preservation for medical and social reasons. Methods: We conducted an observational longitudinal cohort multicentric study to investigate the efficacy and reproducibility of oocyte cryopreservation outcomes in IVF/ICSI cycles. Moreover, the effects of patient and cycle characteristics on the delivery rate (DR) were analyzed. Results: In 486 cycles performed in 450 couples, 2721 oocytes were warmed and 2304 of them survived cryopreservation (84.7%). Of the 2182 oocytes subjected to ICSI, the rates of fertilization and development to top-quality embryos were 75.2 and 48.1%, respectively. A total of 128 deliveries were obtained (26.3% per cycle and 29.4% per transfer) for 450 patients (28.4%) and 147 babies were live born from 929 embryos transferred (15.8%). The forward logistic regression analysis on a per patient basis showed that female age [odds ratio (OR): 0.93, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.88–0.98], number of vitrified oocytes (OR: 1.08, 95% CI: 1.01–1.17) and the day of transfer (OR: 1.97, 95% CI: 1.14–3.42) influenced DR. By recursive partitioning analysis, it can be estimated that more than eight oocytes vitrified are required to improve the outcome (22.6 versus 46.4% DR, respectively). When fewer oocytes are available in women aged .38 years, results are dramatically reduced (12.6 versus 27.5% DR, respectively). Conversely, when .8 oocytes are available, blastocyst culture represents the most efficient policy (62.1% DR; data from one center only). Conclusions: Oocyte vitrification is an efficient and reliable approach, with consistent results between centers and predictable DRs. It should be applied routinely for various indications. A predictive model is proposed to help patient counselling and selection

    Time of morulation and trophectoderm quality are predictors of a live birth after euploid blastocyst transfer: a multicenter study

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    Objective: To investigate whether the morphodynamic characterization of a euploid blastocyst's development allows a higher prediction of a live birth after single-embryo-transfer (SET). Design: Observational cohort study conducted in two phases: training and validation. Setting: Private in vitro fertilization centers. Patient(s): Euploid blastocysts: 511 and 319 first vitrified-warmed SETs from 868 and 546 patients undergoing preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidies (PGT-A) in the training and validation phase, respectively. Intervention(s): Data collected from time of polar body extrusion to time of starting blastulation, and trophectoderm and inner-cell-mass static morphology in all embryos cultured in a specific time-lapse incubator with a continuous medium. Logistic regressions conducted to outline the variables showing a statistically significant association with live birth. In the validation phase, these variables were tested in an independent data set. Main Outcome Measure(s): Live births per SET. Result(s): The average live birth rate (LBR) in the training set was 40% (N = 207/511). Only time of morulation (tM) and trophectoderm quality were outlined as putative predictors of live birth at two IVF centers. In the validation set, the euploid blastocysts characterized by tM <80 hours and high-quality trophectoderm resulted in a LBR of 55.2% (n = 37/67), while those with tM ≥ 80 hours and a low-quality trophectoderm resulted in a LBR of 25.5% (N = 13/51). Conclusion(s): Time of morulation and trophectoderm quality are better predictors of a euploid blastocyst's reproductive competence. Our evidence was reproducible across different centers under specific culture conditions. These data support the crucial role of morulation for embryo development, a stage that involves massive morphologic, cellular, and molecular changes and deserves more investigation
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