4.7 Article

Oocyte number per live birth in IVF: were Steptoe and Edwards less wasteful?

Journal

HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 20, Issue 3, Pages 588-592

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/humrep/deh655

Keywords

IVF; live birth rates; oocyte numbers; ovarian stimulation

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As part of a learning exercise to assess the efficiency of oocyte utilization after controlled ovarian stimulation, we compared historical data from the publications of Steptoe and Edwards describing their early experiences in Oldham and at Bourn Hall with retrospective data from IVF and ICSI cycles carried out at Bourn Hall Clinic during the year 2000. For the purpose of analysing the more recent data, patients were subdivided into groups by age (less than or equal to37 years and greater than or equal to38 years) and by oocyte yield (low, intermediate and high). In patients less than 38 years of age, live birth rates were equivalent in each group, irrespective of the number of oocytes retrieved. Patients who yielded low numbers of oocytes (1-5) utilized an average of 9.6 oocytes per live birth, compared with 25.1 and 51.5 in those who yielded intermediate (6-16) and high (16+) numbers of oocytes. The comparison with historical data suggests that the 'efficiency' of oocyte utilization has not improved significantly since the early 1980s, despite 25 years' experience of controlled ovarian stimulation for IVF treatment.

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