Abstract

The impact of parental overweight/obese on cumulative live birth rate in in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection using a freeze-all strategy is still unknown. To explore the effect of parental body mass index (BMI) on cumulative live birth rate (CLBR) in a freeze-all strategy over 1.5 years. This was a retrospective study in a tertiary care academic medical center; 23 482 patients (35 289 frozen-thawed embryo transfer cycles) were divided into 4 groups according to Asian BMI classification. The main outcome measure was CLBR. Female overweight/obesity had a lower tendency in CLBR (groups 1-4: optimistic: 69.4%, 67.9%, 62.3%, and 65.7%; conservative: 62.9%, 61.1%, 55.4%, and 57.6%) and prolonged time (groups 1-4: 11.0, 12.2, 15.9, and 13.8 months for 60% CLBR in the optimistic method; 8.7, 9.5, 11.7, 11.0 months for 50% CLBR in the conservative method). The same trend to a lesser extent was also observed in male BMI groups. When combining parental BMI, "parental overweight/obesity" had lower CLBR and longer time for reaching CLBR >50% (optimistic: 4.5 months for 60% CLBR; conservative: 3 months for 50% CLBR), followed by "only female high BMI" (optimistic: 2.1 months for 60% CLBR; conservative: 1.7 months for 50% CLBR), while "only male high BMI" had no influence. Our results showed the importance of parental BMI, female BMI, and male BMI on the 1.5-year CLBR using a freeze-all strategy; the time to reach the CLBR (60% in optimistic, 50% in conservative) for overweight and obese patients was several months, but it is not as long as losing weight.

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