4.6 Article

A robust metabolomics approach for the evaluation of human embryos from in vitro fertilization

Journal

ANALYST
Volume 146, Issue 20, Pages 6156-6169

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1an01191j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Merck Serono award [GFI-2012-1]
  2. Comision de Investigaciones Cientificas de la Provincia de Buenos Aires, (CIC-PBA)
  3. Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion Productiva (MINCyT)
  4. Fondo para la Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (FONCYT) [ANR-800-183/11]
  5. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas de Argentina (CONICET)
  6. CIC PBA

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The study established a metabolomic-based approach using FTIR spectroscopy to identify the most competent embryos for transfer. Analysis revealed a highly heterogeneous nature of nonimplanted embryos' supernatant spectra, with approximately 60% exhibiting diverse metabolic fingerprints.
The identification of the most competent embryos for transfer to the uterus constitutes the main challenge of in vitro fertilization (IVF). We established a metabolomic-based approach by applying Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy on 130 samples of 3-day embryo culture supernatants from 26 embryos that implanted and 104 embryos that failed. On examining the internal structure of the data by unsupervised multivariate analysis, we found that the supernatant spectra of nonimplanted embryos constituted a highly heterogeneous group. Whereas similar to 40% of these supernatants were spectroscopically indistinguishable from those of successfully implanted embryos, similar to 60% exhibited diverse, heterogeneous metabolic fingerprints. This observation proved to be the direct result of pregnancy's multifactorial nature, involving both intrinsic embryonic traits and external characteristics. Our data analysis strategy thus involved one-class modelling techniques employing soft independent modelling of class analogy that identified deviant fingerprints as unsuitable for implantation. From these findings, we could develop a noninvasive Fourier-transform-infrared-spectroscopy-based approach that represents a shift in the fundamental paradigm for data modelling applied in assisted-fertilization technologies.

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