Abstract

Objective: To evaluate prospectively the incidence of early pregnancy losses (before menstruation occurs) in IVF and ovum donation cycles. Design: Prospective case-control study. Setting: Tertiary care, university-associated center. Patient(s): One hundred forty-five patients undergoing IVF and 92 undergoing oocyte donation were recruited. The control group for IVF consisted of 15 ovum donors who had no ET and were instructed to avoid intercourse. The control group for oocyte donation included 10 women undergoing a mock cycle of steroid replacement. Intervention(s): Starting on day 6 after ET, the women were instructed to collect the first urine sample of the day every 2 days. Each patient collected six different specimens of urine (days 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, and 16 after ET for cases or the same days without ET for controls. Main Outcome Measure(s): β-HCG was measured with a standardized microparticle enzyme immunoassay, and IVF reproductive outcome was assessed. Result(s): For IVF, positive implantation was registered in 88 of 145 cycles of embryo replacement (60.7%). Only 30 (20.7%) resulted in viable pregnancies, whereas the remaining 58 miscarried. Forty-two of these miscarriages (72.4%) were early pregnancy losses and 13 (22.4%) were classified as clinical abortions. In ovum donation, positive implantation was recorded in 64 of 92 cycles of ET (69.6%). A total of 30 (32.6%) ended in viable pregnancies, whereas the remaining 34 (37.0%) were miscarriages. Early pregnancy loss accounted for 70.6% of pregnancy losses, whereas biochemical pregnancies and clinical abortions accounted for 11.8% and 17.6%, respectively. Conclusion(s): Our results demonstrate that patients undergoing assisted reproductive technology have an increased rate of early pregnancy loss compared with fertile patients. In addition, these data indicate that implantation is more frequently impaired in IVF than in oocyte donation cycles, resulting in a high incidence of early pregnancy loss. This suggests that implantation may be subjected to abnormal conditions in assisted reproduction.

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