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Featured researches published by Evelyn Lee.


Human Reproduction | 2015

The clinical effectiveness of preimplantation genetic diagnosis for aneuploidy in all 24 chromosomes (PGD-A): systematic review

Evelyn Lee; Peter Illingworth; Leeanda Wilton; Georgina M. Chambers

STUDY QUESTION Is preimplantation genetic diagnosis for aneuploidy (PGD-A) with analysis of all chromosomes during assisted reproductive technology (ART) clinically and cost effective? SUMMARY ANSWER The majority of published studies comparing a strategy of PGD-A with morphologically assessed embryos have reported a higher implantation rate per embryo using PGD-A, but insufficient data has been presented to evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of PGD-A in the clinical setting. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY Aneuploidy is a leading cause of implantation failure, miscarriage and congenital abnormalities in humans, and a significant cause of ART failure. Preclinical evidence of PGD-A indicates that the selection and transfer of euploid embryos during ART should improve clinical outcomes. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE AND DURATION A systematic review of the literature was performed for full text English language articles using MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCOPUS, Cochrane Library databases, NHS Economic Evaluation Database and EconLit. The Downs and Black scoring checklist was used to assess the quality of studies. Clinical effectiveness was measured in terms of pregnancy, live birth and miscarriage rates. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTINGS, METHODS Nineteen articles meeting the inclusion criteria, comprising three RCTs in young and good prognosis patients and 16 observation studies were identified. Five of the observational studies included a control group of patients where embryos were selected based on morphological criteria (matched cohort studies). MAIN RESULTS AND ROLE OF CHANCE Of the five studies that included a control group and reported implantation rates, four studies (including two RCTs) demonstrated improved implantation rates in the PGD-A group. Of the eight studies that included a control group, six studies (including two RCTs) reported significantly higher pregnancy rates in the PGD-A group, and in the remaining two studies, equivalent pregnancies rates were reported despite fewer embryos being transferred in the PGD-A group. The three RCTs demonstrated benefit in young and good prognosis patients in terms of clinical pregnancy rates and the use of single embryo transfer. However, studies relating to patients of advanced maternal age, recurrent miscarriage and implantation failure were restricted to matched cohort studies, limiting the ability to draw meaningful conclusions. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION Relevant studies may have been missed and findings from RCTs currently being undertaken could not be included. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS Given the uncertain role of PGD-A techniques, high-quality experimental studies using intention-to-treat analysis and cumulative live birth rates including the comparative outcomes from remaining cryopreserved embryos are needed to evaluate the overall role of PGD-A in the clinical setting. It is only in this way that the true contribution of PGD-A to ART can be understood.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2013

The converging and diverging characteristics of HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men in the Australian Gay Community Periodic Surveys, 2000–2009

Martin Holt; Evelyn Lee; Garrett Prestage; Iryna Zablotska; John de Wit; Limin Mao

Abstract To assess the changing health promotion needs of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive gay men in Australia, we analysed the social and behavioural characteristics of HIV-positive men in the Australian Gay Community Periodic Surveys. We looked at change over time in the characteristics of HIV-positive men (from 2000–2001 to 2008–2009) and compared HIV-positive men with their HIV-negative peers within each time period. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to assess independent changes over time within each HIV status group. A total of 21,620 responses were included in the analyses; 10,537 in 2000–2001 and 11,083 in 2008–2009. Between the two time periods, HIV-positive and HIV-negative men became more similar in the following areas: paid employment, sexual identity, number of male sex partners, the likelihood of having a regular male partner and having a seroconcordant regular male partner. The two groups diverged in these areas: age, ethnicity, educational level, social engagement with gay men, types of relationship with regular male partners, likelihood of unprotected anal intercourse with casual male partners and likelihood of HIV disclosure to casual male partners. Workforce participation and educational attainment have improved among HIV-positive gay men since 2000, but they still lag behind their HIV-negative peers in these areas. Because HIV-positive men are an ageing cohort, support services will need to increasingly address issues of HIV, sexuality and ageing with HIV-positive men. The increase in unprotected anal intercourse and HIV disclosure with casual partners means that education and support services will increasingly need to address effective HIV disclosure and non-condom-based risk reduction strategies with both HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2014

Hospital Costs of Multiple-Birth and Singleton-Birth Children During the First 5 Years of Life and the Role of Assisted Reproductive Technology

Georgina M. Chambers; Van Phuong Hoang; Evelyn Lee; Michèle Hansen; Elizabeth A. Sullivan; Carol Bower; Michael Chapman

IMPORTANCE The unprecedented increase in multiple births during the past 3 decades is a major public health concern and parallels the uptake of medically assisted conception. The economic implications of such births are not well understood. OBJECTIVES To conduct a comprehensive economic and health services assessment of the frequency, duration, and cost of hospital admissions during the first 5 years of life for singleton, twin, and higher-order multiple (HOM) children and to examine the contribution of assisted reproductive technology (ART) to the incidence and cost of multiple births. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A retrospective population cohort study using individually linked birth, hospital, and death records among 233,850 infants born in Western Australia between October 1993 and September 2003, and followed up to September 2008. EXPOSURES Multiple-gestation delivery and ART conception. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Odds of stillbirth, prematurity and low birth weight, frequency and length of hospital admissions, the mean costs by plurality, and the independent effect of prematurity on childhood costs. RESULTS Of 226,624 singleton, 6941 twin, and 285 HOM infants, 1.0% of singletons, 15.4% of twins, and 34.7% of HOM children were conceived following ART. Compared with singletons, twins and HOMs were 3.4 and 9.6 times, respectively, more likely to be stillborn and were 6.4 and 36.7 times, respectively, more likely to die during the neonatal period. Twins and HOMs were 18.7 and 525.1 times, respectively, more likely to be preterm, and 3.6 and 2.8 times, respectively, more likely to be small for gestational age. The mean hospital costs of a singleton, twin, and HOM child to age 5 years were


Human Reproduction | 2014

Hospital utilization, costs and mortality rates during the first 5 years of life: a population study of ART and non-ART singletons

Georgina M. Chambers; Evelyn Lee; Van Phuong Hoang; Michèle Hansen; Carol Bower; Elizabeth A. Sullivan

2730,


Sexual Health | 2017

Adapting behavioural surveillance to antiretroviral-based HIV prevention: reviewing and anticipating trends in the Australian Gay Community Periodic Surveys

Martin Holt; Toby Lea; Limin Mao; Iryna Zablotska; Evelyn Lee; John de Wit; Garrett Prestage

8993, and


Sexual Health | 2013

HIV and hepatitis C virus co-infection among men who have sex with men in Sydney, and associations with sexual and drug use practices.

Toby Lea; Evelyn Lee; Limin Mao; John de Wit; Martin Holt

24,411 (in 2009-2010 US dollars), respectively, with cost differences concentrated in the neonatal period and during the first year of life. Almost 15% of inpatient costs for multiple births could have been avoided if ART twins and HOMs had been born as singletons. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Compared with singletons, multiple-birth infants consume significantly more hospital resources, particularly during the neonatal period and first year of life. A significant proportion of the clinical and economic burden associated with multiple births can be prevented through single-embryo transfer. Increasing ART use worldwide and persistently high ART multiple-birth rates in several countries highlight the need for strategies that encourage single-embryo transfer. The costs from this study can be generalized to other settings.


The Lancet HIV | 2018

Community-level changes in condom use and uptake of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis by gay and bisexual men in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia: results of repeated behavioural surveillance in 2013–17

Martin Holt; Toby Lea; Limin Mao; Johann Kolstee; Iryna Zablotska; Tim Duck; Brent Allan; Michael West; Evelyn Lee; Peter Hull; Andrew E. Grulich; John de Wit; Garrett Prestage

STUDY QUESTION Do singletons conceived following assisted reproduction technologies (ARTs) have significantly different hospital utilization, and therefore costs, compared with non-ART children during the first 5 years of life? SUMMARY ANSWER ART singletons have longer hospital birth-admissions and a small increased risk of re-admission during the first 5 years of life resulting in higher costs of hospital care. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY ART singletons are at greater risk of adverse perinatal outcomes compared with non-ART singletons. Long-term physical and mental health outcomes of ART singletons are generally reassuring. There is a scarcity of information on health service utilization and the health economic impact of ART conceived children. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION A population cohort study using linked birth, hospital and death records. Perinatal outcomes, hospital utilization and costs, and mortality rates were compared for non-ART and ART singletons to 5 years. Adjustments were made for maternal age, parity, sex, birth year, socioeconomic status and funding source. Australian Diagnosis Related Groups cost-weights were used to derive costs. All costs are reported in 2009/2010 Australian dollars. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS All babies born in Western Australia between 1994 and 2003 were included; 224 425 non-ART singletons and 2199 ART conceived singletons. Hospital admission and death records in Western Australia linked to 2008 were used. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE Overall, ART singletons had a significantly longer length of stay during the birth-admission (mean difference 1.8 days, P < 0.001) and a 20% increased risk of being admitted during the first 5 years of life. The average adjusted difference in hospital admission costs up to 5 years of age was


Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 2018

Assisted reproductive technology (ART) cumulative live birth rates following preimplantation genetic diagnosis for aneuploidy (PGD-A) or morphological assessment of embryos: A cohort analysis

Evelyn Lee; Georgina M. Chambers; Lyndon Hale; Peter Illingworth; Leeanda Wilton

2490, with most of the additional cost occurring during the birth-admission (


Human Reproduction | 2015

Reply: Preimplantation genetic screening using comprehensive chromosome screening: evidence and remaining challenges

Evelyn Lee; Peter Illingworth; Leeanda Wilton; Georgina M. Chambers

1473). The independent residual cost associated with ART conception was


Archive | 2015

Gay community periodic survey: Melbourne 2015

Evelyn Lee; Limin Mao; Tex McKenzie; Colin Batrouney; Michael West; Garrett Prestage; Iryna Zablotska; John de Wit; Martin Holt

342 during the birth-admission and an additional

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Limin Mao

University of New South Wales

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Martin Holt

University of New South Wales

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Georgina M. Chambers

University of New South Wales

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Iryna Zablotska

University of New South Wales

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John de Wit

University of New South Wales

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Toby Lea

University of New South Wales

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Carol Bower

University of Western Australia

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Michèle Hansen

Telethon Institute for Child Health Research

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