View clinical trials related to Reproductive Disorder.
Filter by:In France, nearly 3% of children are conceived by the technique of Assisted Reproductive Medicine, of which nearly 70% by in vitro fertilization (IVF). The rates of clinical pregnancy by oocyte retrieval or embryo transfer have not changed much. The use of mono-embryo transfer reduces the risk of multiple pregnancies and associated obstetric complications. The choice of embryo to transfer or freeze is a key element in improving the chances of success of IVF. It is usually based on conventional morphological criteria (reference method) that are punctual, qualitative and subjective. However, embryo morphology at early stages has little predictive value for obtaining a late-stage embryo and its chances of implantation. The recent use of time-lapse technology during embryonic culture makes it possible to associate morphological criteria with continuous monitoring of the kinetics of embryonic development. The choice of the embryo to be transferred is then made according to morphokinetic criteria (conventional morphological criteria to which are added the data of the kinetics of embryonic development). Two recent retrospective studies give contradictory results, the first shows higher birth rates in the group of embryos selected according to conventional morphological criteria, the second concludes that morphokinetic analysis is superior. Morphokinetic criteria would also be more objective and reproducible. However, the use of morphokinetic parameters remains controversial in the literature.
The aim of this study was to compare the clinical outcomes between fresh embryo and frozen embryo transfer in in vitro fertilization (IVF). All frozen embryo was vitrified at pronuclear stage (2PN) and cultured to cleavage embryos for transfer. This is a retrospective study. All IVF cycles were included in this study and further divided into fresh and frozen embryo transfer groups. The collection data including: stimulation protocols, medicines, blood test results, pregnancy test and all clinical data. The primary outcome is pregnancy rate and secondary outcome is implantation rate.
Preimplantational genetic screen (PGS) is tool for diagnosis of embryo chromosome abnormality before transfer. Under this tool, patients with a family history of genetic disease or special genetic disease could avoid to produce chromosomal abnormalities of the next pregnant. This study is a retrospective study, data collection from 2001 Jan. to 2015. Nov. Patients underwent PGS and data including the couples age, infertility factors, stimulation protocols, medicine records, embryo quality records and blood tests were collected in this study. Analysis the relationship between outcomes of PGS, clinical outcomes and embryo quality is performed and further to find a diagnosis reference for clinical care.
Objective: To investigate the correlation between total and bioavailable serum 25-OH vitamin D, ovarian reserve and ovarian response to controlled stimulation in egg donors.