IVF Research - In vitro Fertilization, Infertility, Treatment, Procedure, Pregnancy, Success Rates

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Intracytoplasmic sperm injection as a treatment for unexplained total fertilization failure or low fertilization after conventional in vitro fertilization.

van der Westerlaken L, Helmerhorst F, Dieben S, Naaktgeboren N

Department of Reproductive Medicine, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands. L.A.van_der_Westerlaken@LUMC.nl

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether IVF or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) should be the choice of treatment in case of a previous IVF attempt with unexplained total fertilization failure or low fertilization (<25%). DESIGN: Prospective study. SETTING: Leiden University Medical Center. PATIENT(S): Thirty-eight couples undergoing IVF and ICSI on sibling oocytes after a first IVF attempt with total fertilization failure or with low fertilization (<25%). INTERVENTION(S): Performing IVF and ICSI on sibling oocytes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Fertilization and (ongoing) pregnancy rate. RESULT(S): A total of 271 oocytes were collected in 24 oocyte retrievals in the total fertilization failure group. Hundred nine oocytes were randomly allocated to IVF and 12 were fertilized (11%); 162 sibling oocytes were allocated to ICSI and 78 were fertilized (48%). In 8 of the 24 patients fertilization occurred after IVF. The pregnancy rate after transfer of 1 IVF and 1 ICSI embryo (n = 3) was 67% and after the transfer of 2 ICSI embryos (n = 21) this was 52%. In the low fertilization group 169 oocytes were collected in 14 oocyte retrievals. Seventy-two oocytes were randomly allocated to IVF and 16 were fertilized (22%). Ninety-seven sibling oocytes were allocated to ICSI and 58 were fertilized (60%). In 7 of 14 patients fertilization occurred after IVF. The pregnancy rate after the transfer of 1 IVF and 1 ICSI embryo (n = 5) was 80% and after the transfer of 2 ICSI embryos (n = 9) this was 33%. CONCLUSION(S): Performing ICSI on some oocytes of a cohort may avoid total fertilization failures both in patients with a history of total fertilization failure and in patients with a history of low fertilization, as the percentage of fertilization is higher after ICSI compared to IVF and the recurrence of total fertilization failure and low fertilization is high after IVF treatment.

Published 7 March 2005 in Fertil Steril, 83(3): 612-7.
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