Embryo morphology or cleavage stage: How to select the best embryos for transfer after in-vitro fertilization

423Citations
Citations of this article
110Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

This retrospective study of 1001 in-vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles included a consecutive series of single transfers (n = 341), dual transfers (n = 410) and triple transfers (n = 250) where all the transferred embryos in each cycle were of identical quality score and identical cleavage stage. In our 2 day culture system, transfer of 4-cell embryos resulted in a significantly higher implantation rate and pregnancy rate (23 and 49%) compared with 2-cell embryos (12 and 22%) and 3-cell embryos (7 and 15%). Furthermore, the transfer of 4-cell embryos resulted in a significantly higher pregnancy rate compared with embryos that had cleaved beyond the 4-cell stage (28%). The implantation rate (21%) and pregnancy rate (43%) after transfer of embryos of score 1.0 were significantly higher than after transfer of embryos of score 2.0 (14 and 32% respectively). Transferring embryos of score 2.1 resulted in significantly higher implantation rates (26%) and similar pregnancy rates compared with score 1.0. Transferring embryos of score 2.2-3.0 resulted in a significantly lower implantation rate (5%) and pregnancy rate (15%). A striking finding was that embryos of quality score 2.0 had a significantly lower implantation rate compared with embryos of quality score 1.0 and 2.1 and a significantly lower pregnancy rate compared to embryos of quality score 1.0. We also found a lower implantation rate and pregnancy rate when transferring 3-cell embryos. These findings may indicate periods of increased sensitivity to damage during the cell cycle. In conclusion, these results substantiate the idea of the superiority of 4-cell embryos and demonstrate that minor amounts of fragments in the embryo may not be of any importance. These findings may call for a shift when weighing the two main morphological components (quality score and cleavage stage) in the sense that reaching a 4-cell cleavage stage even with the presence of a minor amount of fragments should be preferred to a 2-cell embryo with no fragments.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ziebe, S., Petersen, K., Lindenberg, S., Andersen, A. G., Gabrielsen, A., & Andersen, A. N. (1997). Embryo morphology or cleavage stage: How to select the best embryos for transfer after in-vitro fertilization. Human Reproduction, 12(7), 1545–1549. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/12.7.1545

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free