Abstract

Pregnancies in donor egg recipients are associated with a higher risk of adverse perinatal outcomes, potentially due to immunologic reactions to a foreign oocyte resulting in impaired placentation.1-3 Reciprocal IVF in same-sex female couples involves the use of a patient’s oocyte to create an embryo that is transferred to the their partner to conceive a pregnancy.4 In reciprocal IVF (Co-IVF), the oocyte comes from a familiar source to which the recipient may have developed a level of immune tolerance.

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