Artigo Revisado por pares

The effect of assisted hatching on pregnancy rates after frozen embryo transfer

1996; Elsevier BV; Volume: 65; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0015-0282(16)58080-7

ISSN

1556-5653

Autores

Robert H. Israel, J.H. Check, Linda Hoover, Ahmad Nazari, Althea O’Shaughnessy, Donna Summers,

Tópico(s)

Reproductive Health and Technologies

Resumo

To compare clinical pregnancy and implantation rates after transfer of frozenthawed embryos prepared according to an assisted hatching protocol or a nonassisted hatching protocol. A historical cohort study in which a cohort of patients who underwent an assisted hatching protocol was matched for clinical parameters to an external historical cohort treated before assisted hatching was available. In vitro fertilization-ET facility of a university-based practice. Seventy-nine matched pairs. Nonassisted hatching patients: embryos were thawed, cultured in human tubal fluid + 0.5% bovine serum albumin until 48 hours and transferred. Assisted hatching patients: embryos thawed, cultured in human tubal fluid + 10% synthetic serum substitute until 72 hours, had assisted hatching and transferred. Clinical pregnancy (gestational sac) and implantation rates. Twelve (15.2%) clinical pregnancies per transfer in nonhatched group versus 24 (30.4%) in hatched group. Nonhatched group: 284 embryos transferred; 15 (5.3%) implanted. Three pregnancies (25.0%) had two sacs. Hatched embryos: 269 were transferred; 37 (13.7%) implanted. Eleven pregnancies (45.8%) were multiple gestations (9 twins, 2 triplets). Clinical pregnancy and implantation rates were higher for group having assisted hatching protocol. It is not clear whether the improvement is due to the overall methodology change or to assisted hatching. Assisted hatching using the zona-drilling technique is not detrimental to frozen-thawed human embryos and may be beneficial.

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