Abstract

Background and Aims: Single embryo transfer is increasingly done in practice to avoid multiple pregnancy. Therefore, it is important to ensure the embryo with the best pregnancy outcome is selected. Although new criteria involving genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic have been developed to predict embryo outcome, morphology of the embryo remains as the main indicator because it is easy to implement and less controversial. To study the correlation of multinucleated embryos and pregnancy outcomes Method: This is a retrospective review of a total of 411 embryos from 225 women undergoing their first IVF or ICSI cycle in University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur between January 2019 and October 2021. Multinucleation was defined as the presence of more than one nucleus within at least one of the blastomeres of a 2-cell embryo and a time-lapse imaging system was used to observe embryo development (Embryoscope; Unisense Fertilitech). Group allocation was based on the presence or absence of multinucleation on day 2 after egg retrieval. Embryos with evidence of one or more blastomere having multinucleation were included in the studied group (n = 67 embryos). Embryos without any blastomere exhibiting multinucleation were included in the control group (n = 344 embryos). Results: The data were based on 225 transfers of 411 embryos consisting of 16.3% (n = 67) from studied group and 83.7% (n = 344) from the control group. The biochemical pregnancy rate and implantation rate is lower in the studied group compared to the control group although not statistically significant (Table 1). Conclusion: Multinucleated embryos reduce the implantation rate and clinical pregnancy rate although not statistically significant.

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