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American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1992

Obstetric outcome of in vitro fertilization pregnancies compared with normally conceived pregnancies.

S.L. Tan; Pat Doyle; Stuart Campbell; Valerie Beral; Botros Rizk; Peter Brinsden; Bridgett Mason; R. G. Edwards

OBJECTIVE To compare the obstetric outcome of in vitro fertilization pregnancies with normally conceived pregnancies. STUDY DESIGN The obstetric outcome of in vitro fertilization pregnancies achieved in 763 British residents at two in vitro fertilization clinics resulting in the births of 961 babies were compared by means of the relative risk statistic with a control group of naturally conceived primiparous pregnancies matched by maternal age and multiplicity of pregnancy. RESULTS Twenty-five percent of in vitro fertilization pregnancies were multiple pregnancies. The incidence of singleton term breech presentation was similar to that among controls. As compared with controls there was an increased incidence among in vitro fertilization pregnancies of vaginal bleeding and hypertension requiring hospitalization (p less than 0.001) and cesarean births (p less than 0.001) and, among in vitro fertilization singleton pregnancies, an increased incidence of intrauterine growth retardation (p less than 0.05), placenta previa (p less than 0.05), and preterm delivery (p less than 0.001). The congenital malformation, stillbirth, and perinatal mortality rates were comparable with maternal age-standardized national rates. CONCLUSIONS Although the majority of in vitro fertilization pregnancies have a satisfactory obstetric outcome, there are a number of increased obstetric risks that may reflect the history of infertility, the relatively high incidence of poor obstetric history, and the lower threshold for obstetric intervention in in vitro fertilization patients.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1991

Heterotopic pregnancies after in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer

Botros Rizk; Seang Lin Tan; Samuel Morcos; Andrew Riddle; Peter Brinsden; Bridgett Mason; R. G. Edwards

Seventeen cases of heterotopic pregnancies are reported among 1648 clinical pregnancies after in vitro fertilization. The high prevalence of tubal damage among IVF patients and the use of superovulation and multiple embryo transfer might predispose patients to the condition. Nine patients reported abdominal pain and vaginal bleeding, five patients did not have symptoms, and three had acute abdominal emergencies. Transvaginal ultrasonography was superior to transabdominal ultrasonography in the diagnosis of extrauterine pregnancies. The presence of an intrauterine gestation sac in a patient without symptoms should not exclude the diagnosis of a concomitant extrauterine pregnancy until the pelvis is carefully visualized. Early diagnoses of viable ectopic pregnancies before rupture abolishes mortality and morbidity and offers the chance of patient selection for conservative treatment. In two patients the extrauterine gestation sac was treated by transvaginal aspiration and injection of potassium chloride under ultrasonographic guidance. The outcome of the intrauterine pregnancy was favorable regardless of the method of treatment of the ectopic pregnancy.


Fertility and Sterility | 1995

Vaginal color Doppler assessment of uterine artery impedance correlates with immunohistochemical markers of endometrial receptivity required for the implantation of an embryo

Christopher V. Steer; Seang Lin Tan; David G. Dillon; Bridgett Mason; Stuart Campbell

OBJECTIVE To investigate the correlation between uterine artery impedance with immunohistochemical histologic, and ultrasonographic markers of uterine receptivity. DESIGN A prospective study of subfertile women undergoing a frozen embryo replacement cycle. SETTING A tertiary infertility clinic. PATIENTS The study was based on 86 patients who had failed to become pregnant during a standard IVF treatment cycle and who had at least two good quality embryos cryopreserved. INTERVENTIONS All patients had pituitary desensitization with the GnRH analogue buserelin acetate, followed by E2 and P replacement therapy. Vaginal color Doppler images of both uterine arteries were obtained on days 7, 14, and 21 of the first (trial) cycle. On day 21, an endometrial biopsy was taken for dating a 24-kd protein, placental protein 14, and E2 receptor assessment. After a menstrual bleed had been induced, administration of estrogen and P was reinstituted and embryos transferred to the uterus on the 3rd or 4th day of P administration. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The mean pulsatility index of the left and right uterine arteries, a semiquantitative score of endometrial 24-kd protein, PP14, and E2 receptor assessment, endometrial histologic dating, and pregnancy outcome. RESULTS Nineteen of 76 patients who had a successful ET became pregnant. The pulsatility index on day 14 of both the trial and ET cycles was significantly lower in those who achieved pregnancy as compared with those who did not conceive: 2.65 (range 1.3 to 3.4) versus 3.85 (1.8 to 6.8) and 2.85 (1.4 to 3.6) versus 4.15 (2.1 to 6.8), respectively. There were significant correlations between pulsatility index and 24-kd protein, E2 receptor, and endometrial histology but not with PP14 and endometrial thickness. CONCLUSIONS Uterine artery impedance has a significant correlation with biochemical markers of uterine receptivity and accurately predicts the probability of pregnancy in frozen embryo replacement cycles. It is a useful method for assessing uterine receptivity in assisted conception programs.


Fertility and Sterility | 1988

An analysis of factors influencing the establishment of a clinical pregnancy in an ultrasound-based ambulatory in vitro fertilization program

Vinay Sharma; Andrew Riddle; Bridgett Mason; Julian S. Pampiglione; Stuart Campbell

In the study period (June 1984 to December 1986), 2232 cycles were stimulated in 1294 patients. Ultrasound-directed oocyte recovery (UDOR) was performed as an ambulatory procedure in 1737 (77.8%) cycles, resulting in 1375 embryos transfers (ET). Age, etiology, menstrual cycle length, number of oocytes collected, and number of embryos transferred were important determinants of the outcome. The number of attempts at in vitro fertilization did not affect the clinical pregnancy rate (CPR). In patients receiving four embryos, the CPR appeared to be highest when up to seven embryos were available for transfer. The fertilization rate in an individual cycle had a good prognostic value, the implantation rate being highest when 7 to 9 oocytes were retrieved and greater than 60% of these were fertilized. When 10 or more oocytes were collected, the implantation rate showed a progressive decline, regardless of the fertilization rate. Furthermore, multiple pregnancies failed to occur when greater than 12 oocytes were retrieved or more than eight embryos were available for transfer. These data suggest that, in excessively stimulated cycles, the quality of oocytes and embryos or uterine receptiveness may be suboptimal, and the transfer of more than four embryos is unlikely to increase the success rate.


Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology | 1989

Emotional, marital and sexual functioning in patients embarking upon IVF and AID treatment for infertility

Rachel Cook; John Parsons; Bridgett Mason; Susan Golombok

Fifty-nine women attending infertility clinics for IVF and AID treatment were interviewed and asked to complete questionnaires assessing anxiety, depression, marital functioning, sexual satisfaction and strategies for coping with infertility. Thirty-four of their partners also completed questionnaires. Both women and men experienced high levels of anxiety, but not depression. Assessment of current marital and sexual functioning did not reveal significant levels of problems. Women and men were divided into high and low distress groups and compared with respect to their use of different coping strategies. Those patients who were anxious and/or depressed were more likely to engage in avoidance-coping strategies than those who did not have emotional problems. No such relationship was found for avoidance coping and either marital or sexual functioning.


Fertility and Sterility | 1990

Ovarian cyst aspiration and the outcome of in vitro fertilization

Botros Rizk; Seang Lin Tan; Charles Kingsland; Christopher V. Steer; Bridgett Mason; Stuart Campbell

This study was designed to ascertain whether any benefit would be derived from aspirating ovarian cysts identified before ovarian stimulation in patients undergoing in vitro fertilization. Thirty-seven patients who had ovarian cysts were categorized into two groups: group A (n = 14) with baseline ovarian cysts and group B (n = 23) with ovarian cysts that developed during pituitary suppression with the gonadotropin-releasing hormone analog. Each group was prospectively randomized into two subgroups depending on whether the ovarian cysts were aspirated or not. In group A, there was a significantly greater number of follicles and oocytes in the ovaries in which cysts were aspirated. However, there was no significant difference in the total number of follicles, oocytes retrieved and fertilized, or in the final outcome. In group B, there was no significant difference in folliculogenesis between the aspirated and nonaspirated subgroups. These observations suggest that the presence of a baseline ovarian cyst may reduce folliculogenesis but do not support routine cyst aspiration if the patient has two functional ovaries.


Fertility and Sterility | 1990

Influence of superovulation on endometrial and embryonic development

Vinay Sharma; Malcolm Whitehead; Bridgett Mason; John Pryse-Davies; Timothy Ryder; Mitch Dowsett; Stuart Campbell; William P. Collins

The authors have studied the temporal relationship between follicular rupture and endometrial development in 13 women during a natural ovarian cycle (length 25 to 35 days), and subsequently after standard treatment with clomiphene citrate, human menopausal gonadotropin and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) to induce multiple folliculogenesis for oocyte recovery, in vitro fertilization, and embryo freezing (cycle length 23 to 27 days). An endometrial biopsy was taken during both cycles 1.5 to 2.0 days after the oocytes had been released or removed. The samples were examined by light and transmission electron microscopy. Samples of peripheral blood were taken at defined times for hormone analysis. After treatment 11 subjects (85%) had advanced morphological development of the endometrium (8 women by 3 to 4 days, 3 women by 1 to 2 days). The concentrations of plasma estradiol (E2) and progesterone (P) on the days of follicular rupture and endometrial biopsy were significantly raised in the treatment cycles. The concentration of total urinary estrogens on the day of hCG administration and the mean change in the concentration of plasma E2 (treatment/control) on the days of endometrial biopsy were positively correlated with the extent of endometrial advancement. In addition, the mean change in the concentration of plasma P (treatment/control) was markedly increased on the days of follicular rupture and endometrial biopsy in those subjects with an advanced endometrium. Embryonic development was not so obviously related to the extent of superovulation. Asynchronous endometrial and embryonic development may therefore contribute to the low pregnancy rate in these patients.


Fertility and Sterility | 1992

The routine use of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists for all patients undergoing in vitro fertilization. Is there any medical advantage? A prospective randomized study.

Charles Kingsland; Seang-Lin Tan; Nigel Bickerton; Bridgett Mason; Stuart Campbell

Objective To determine if the routine use of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists (GnRH-a) for all patients undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) produces any significant medical advantage. Design Prospective randomized study. Patients Three hundred eight patients having their first ever IVF attempt. Interventions Patients were randomly divided into four groups and received either human menopausal gonadotropin (hMG) alone for ovarian simulation (group A, n=81); clomiphene citrate and hMG (group B, n=77); a 3-day ultrashort course of GnRH-a and hMG (group C, n=74); or pituitary desensitization with GnRH-a followed by hMG (group D, n=76). Results The indications for IVF and mean age of all four groups of patients were comparable. There was a significant difference in the number of embryos cleaved and transferred among the groups, but there were no significant differences in the cancellation rate, mean number of oocytes collected or fertilized, and number of cases of failed fertilization. There were also no significant differences in the pregnancy and live birth rates per cycle commenced or per embryo transfer. Conclusion The routine use of GnRH-a for all patients undergoing IVF has practical but no significant medical advantages.


Fertility and Sterility | 1990

The clinical outcome of reinsemination of human oocytes fertilized in vitro

Julian S. Pampiglione; Carla Mills; Stuart Campbell; Christopher V. Steer; Charles Kingsland; Bridgett Mason

To assess the value of reinseminating human oocytes, the results of 1,662 embryo transfers were analyzed. In 1,460 transfers embryos arose from oocytes that had fertilized and cleaved after initial insemination. The pregnancy rate was significantly higher than in transfers of embryos (n = 76) resulting solely from reinseminated oocytes (27% versus 3%). Adding reinseminated embryos to those fertilizing on initial insemination at transfer failed to raise the pregnancy rate. Only 2 of 158 (1.3%) reinseminated embryos implanted compared with 540 of 4,181 (12.9%) fertilized and cleaved on initial insemination (P less than 0.001). Reinseminated embryos do occasionally produce viable pregnancies. It is therefore worth considering replacement of these embryos if initial fertilization has entirely failed. Patients should be counseled as to the low chance of implantation with these embryos.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989

Ovarian hyperstimulation presenting as acute hydrothorax after in vitro fertilization

Charles Kingsland; John V. Collins; Botros Rizk; Bridgett Mason

Ovarian hyperstimulation that occurs with an isolated hydrothorax as the only symptom has previously been reported. We describe the second such case, the first to occur after in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer.

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Vinay Sharma

St James's University Hospital

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Botros Rizk

University of South Alabama

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Carla Mills

University of Cambridge

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