Time-lapse parameters as predictors of blastocyst development and pregnancy outcome in embryos from good prognosis patients: A prospective cohort study

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Abstract

STUDY QUESTIONDo early time-lapse parameters predict which embryos will develop to high-quality blastocysts and does timing of development differ between embryos that implant and those that do not.SUMMARY ANSWERDevelopment to high-quality blastocysts could be predicted within the first 48 h of culture, whereas time-lapse parameters could not predict pregnancy.WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADYHistorical cohort studies on embryos from unselected groups of patients have suggested several putative kinetic markers of viability. Before well-designed randomized studies can be conducted, relevant selection models based on solid data must be developed. So far conclusions from the previous studies are ambiguous.STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATIONA prospective cohort study conducted from February 2011 to June 2012. A total of 571 ICSI embryos from 92 patients were included in the blastocyst development analysis and 84 single embryo transfers were included in the pregnancy outcome analysis.PARTICIPANTS/ MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODSEmbryos from women aged <38 years, with no endometriosis and ≥8 oocytes retrieved. University affiliated clinic. Embryos were cultured in a time-lapse incubator till Day 6. Logistic regression analysis was performed with variables selected based on indication.MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCEDuration of the first cytokinesis, duration of the 3-cell stage and direct cleavage to 3-cells predicted development to high-quality blastocyst. We found no difference in timing between implanted and non-implanted embryos.LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTIONA larger study might detect differences in timing between implanted and non-implanted embryos. The cohort consisted of good prognosis patients only and may not be representative of the entire IVF population.WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGSOur results in context with the lack of consistency in previous studies and the presumed influences of different external factors indicate that a universal algorithm for optimal timing of development might not be feasible. The apparent negative significance of division patterns that differ from the expected may imply that time-lapse will facilitate de-selection of embryos. © The Author 2013.

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Kirkegaard, K., Kesmodel, U. S., Hindkjær, J. J., & Ingerslev, H. J. (2013). Time-lapse parameters as predictors of blastocyst development and pregnancy outcome in embryos from good prognosis patients: A prospective cohort study. Human Reproduction, 28(10), 2643–2651. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/det300

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