Abstract

To determine whether the serum levels of pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A), pregnancy-specific beta(1)-glycoprotein (SP1), placental lactogen (hPL) and human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) are different in pregnancies obtained after in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and embryo transfer (ET) in comparison to spontaneous pregnancies. Assessment of the need to establish normal medians for biochemical trisomy screening in IVF pregnancies. The population comprised 96 IVF-ET pregnancies, of which 79 came from fresh gonadotrophin-stimulated cycles and 17 from embryo transfers without gonadotrophin stimulation (natural cycle IVF, frozen embryo transfers), and 156 spontaneous pregnancies. A single blood sample was obtained between 7 + 0 and 16 + 3 weeks. PAPP-A, SP1, hPL and hCG were quantified and the levels compared between gonadotrophin-stimulated IVF, steroid-only- or non-stimulated IVF, and controls with respect to gestational age using non-parametric statistical analysis. PAPP-A and hPL levels were reduced after stimulated IVF in early gestation (before 10 pregnancy weeks); SP1 followed the same trend without reaching statistical significance. hCG tended to be increased after IVF treatment including non-gonadotrophin-stimulation cycles, and also beyond 10 pregnancy weeks. Reduced PAPP-A with increased hCG yields an increased risk in screening for foetal trisomy 21. We confirm recently published observations but do not recommend the establishment of normal medians for IVF pregnancies since the extent of the deviations is varying according to the different stimulation protocols and dosages of gonadotrophins used.

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