Context: The impact of parental overweight/obese on cumulative live birth rate in in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection using a freeze-all strategy is still unknown. Objective: To explore the effect of parental body mass index (BMI) on cumulative live birth rate (CLBR) in a freeze-all strategy over 1.5 years. Methods: This was a retrospective study in a tertiary care academic medical center; 23 482 patients (35 289 frozen-thawed embryo transfer cycles) were divided into 4 groups according to Asian BMI classification. The main outcome measure was CLBR. Results: Female overweight/obesity had a lower tendency in CLBR (groups 1-4: optimistic: 69.4%, 67.9%, 62.3%, and 65.7%; conservative: 62.9%, 61.1%, 55.4%, and 57.6%) and prolonged time (groups 1-4: 11.0, 12.2, 15.9, and 13.8 months for 60% CLBR in the optimistic method; 8.7, 9.5, 11.7, 11.0 months for 50% CLBR in the conservative method). The same trend to a lesser extent was also observed in male BMI groups. When combining parental BMI, "parental overweight/obesity"had lower CLBR and longer time for reaching CLBR >50% (optimistic: 4.5 months for 60% CLBR; conservative: 3 months for 50% CLBR), followed by "only female high BMI"(optimistic: 2.1 months for 60% CLBR; conservative: 1.7 months for 50% CLBR), while "only male high BMI"had no influence. Conclusion: Our results showed the importance of parental BMI, female BMI, and male BMI on the 1.5-year CLBR using a freeze-all strategy; the time to reach the CLBR (60% in optimistic, 50% in conservative) for overweight and obese patients was several months, but it is not as long as losing weight.
CITATION STYLE
Shen, X., Xie, Y., Chen, D., Guo, W., Feng, G., Jiang, W., … Wang, L. (2022). Effect of Female and Male Body Mass Index on Cumulative Live Birth Rates in the Freeze-all Strategy. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 107(4), E1467–E1476. https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgab858
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.