4.7 Article

Choosing the best embryo by time lapse versus standard morphology

Journal

FERTILITY AND STERILITY
Volume 103, Issue 2, Pages 323-332

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2014.11.003

Keywords

Embryo selection; time-lapse monitoring; ART; human

Funding

  1. Ferring for research in reproductive medicine at Aarhus University Hospital

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Within the past few years the morphological evaluation of in vitro fertilized embryos has been extended to include continuous surveillance, enabled by the introduction of time-lapse incubators developed specifically for IVF treatment. As a result time-lapse monitoring has been implemented in many clinics worldwide. The proposed benefits compared with culture in a standard incubator and fixed time-point evaluation are uninterrupted culture, a flexible workflow in the laboratory, and improved embryo selection. The latter is based on the reasonable assumption that more frequent observations will provide substantially more information on the relationship between development, timing, and embryo viability. Several retrospective studies have confirmed a relationship between time-lapse parameters and embryo viability evaluated by developmental competence, aneuploidy, and clinical pregnancy. Furthermore a much anticipated randomized study has shown improved pregnancy rates (PRs) after culture in a time-lapse incubator combined with selection using a hierarchical time-lapse selection model. At present this is the only randomized study on possible benefits of time lapse in human embryology. Strict evidence may still seem too weak to introduce time lapse in routine clinical setting. This aim of this review is therefore to perform a balanced discussion of the evidence for time-lapse monitoring. (C) 2015 by American Society for Reproductive Medicine.

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