Abstract

BackgroundOocyte donation is a medical technique used principally for woman with ovarian failure. Optimizing donor recruitment is essential to obtain the best results with this technique. Understanding how donor parameters influence outcome for the recipients is fundamental. The aim of this study was to determine whether clinical and/or biological parameters in the donors influence the chance of pregnancy in recipients. Our objective was also to verify whether the outcomes of controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) are predictive of pregnancy in the recipients.MethodsA retrospective observational study was conducted in the Department of Reproductive Medicine in the Lille University Hospital. Between September 2005 and April 2014, COS was performed in 145 donors for 308 recipients’ cycles. We compared the cycles whose outcome was pregnancy to the cycles without pregnancy. Quantitative variables were compared using the nonparametric Mann–Whitney test. Qualitative variables were compared using a Chi-2 test or Fisher exact test, according to the numbers. Covariance analysis was performed to adjust for potential confounding factors.ResultsThe donors who produced at least one pregnancy had a mean baseline serum anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) level significantly higher than those who did not (p = 0.001). The mean antral follicle count did not differ between the 2 groups. After covariance analysis controlling for the number of couples attributed to a given donor, this difference remained significant (p = 0.029). Mature follicle number, estradiol serum level at the trigger day, number of mature oocytes and embryo number were significantly higher in the donors who produced pregnancy.ConclusionSerum AMH level is associated with pregnancy outcome after oocyte donation.

Highlights

  • Oocyte donation is a medical technique used principally for woman with ovarian failure

  • At the end of 2011 in France, 1,806 couples were waiting for oocyte donation, whereas only 402 couples received a donation the same year

  • The use of ovarian reserve markers, such as serum Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), to select the donors with a good potential ovarian response lead to refusal of older donors who more frequently have an AMH serum level lower than 1.5 ng/mL

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Summary

Introduction

Oocyte donation is a medical technique used principally for woman with ovarian failure. Understanding how donor parameters influence outcome for the recipients is fundamental. The aim of this study was to determine whether clinical and/ or biological parameters in the donors influence the chance of pregnancy in recipients. Our objective was to verify whether the outcomes of controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) are predictive of pregnancy in the recipients. At the end of 2011 in France, 1,806 couples were waiting for oocyte donation, whereas only 402 couples received a donation the same year This activity increased slightly but insufficiently to address all requests, resulting in a long delay for recipient couples. Many clinical or biological parameters can influence ART results such as the woman’s age, ovarian reserve and oocyte quality. The value of this biological marker to predict pregnancy in oocyte donation is unknown

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