Starting IVF younger significantly increases pregnancy success rates
Wednesday, 26 July, 2017
Women who commence begin assisted reproductive technology (ART) before age 30聽have a much higher chance of聽falling pregnant than older women.
Australian and New Zealand women who begin ART聽ovarian stimulation treatment before the age of 30 have a 43.7% chance of a live birth after one cycle of treatment, with success rates increasing to between 69.2% and 92.8% by the seventh cycle, according to published in the聽.
The authors found that聽鈥渢he highest rates were for the first complete cycle undertaken by women who commenced treatment before the age of 35 (43.7% for women under 30; 43.4% for women aged 30鈥34 years). The lowest live birth rates for the first complete cycle were for women aged 40鈥44 (10.7%) and 45 or more (1.4%).鈥
Almost 70,000 ART cycles are performed each year in Australia and New Zealand. Success rates per individual embryo transfer cycle attempt are generally reported, rather than from the overall perspective of a course of ART treatment. The research, led by Associate Professor Georgina Chambers, director of the at the , is the first to report cumulative live birth rates (CLBRs) based on Australian and New Zealand data for complete ovarian stimulation cycles.
鈥淭he cycle-specific live birth rate [the percentage of live births resulting from a specific cycle] decreased with increasing maternal age and with increasing cycle number,鈥 Associate Professor Chambers and her colleagues wrote.
The researchers followed 56,652 women who began ART treatment in Australia and New Zealand during 2009鈥2012, and followed them until 2014 or the first treatment-dependent live birth.
CLBRs and cycle-specific live birth rates were calculated for up to eight complete cycles of treatment, stratified by the age of the women. The conservative CLBR assumed that women who discontinued treatment would have had no chance of a live birth had they continued treatment, while the optimal CLBR assumed that they would have had the same chance as women who continued treatment. The range between the two estimates provides a reasonable appraisal of the probability of at least one live birth from repeated ART cycles.
鈥淐LBRs based on complete ART cycles are meaningful estimates of the success of ART treatment, reflecting contemporary clinical practice and encouraging safe embryo transfer practices,鈥 the authors concluded.
鈥淭hese estimates can be used when counselling prospective parents about the likelihood of treatment success, as well as for educating the public and informing policy on ART treatments.鈥
The is a publication of the .
Victoria's Q3 median ED wait times the lowest on record
Victoria's quarter three performance data (January–March) has shown improvement across...
Irregularities in a clinician's cases prompt 15-month lookback
St Vincent's 黑料吃瓜群网 Sydney has detailed a 15-month lookback review — prompted by...
Two researchers receive $899,000 in cardiovascular funding
In heart-related news this Heart Week (5–11 May), two University of Newcastle researchers...