Frozen Embryos Aren’t Always Necessary for IVF, New Studies Show
Women have more options than previously thought for how to undergo in-vitro fertilization, according to two new studies published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Frozen embryos are not more effective than fresh embryos for all women, according to researchers from China and Vietnam who published their findings in the the New England Journal of Medicine. This could challenge the long-held belief of fertility specialists that freezing and thawing embryos before implanting them offers a better chance of successful pregnancy and birth.
Doctors came to that conclusion — freezing embryos before implanting works best — because it has been proven to be true for women experiencing infertility as the result of polycystic ovary syndrome, or PCOS. But for women not suffering PCOS, freezing embryos doesn’t make much of a difference.
A research group in 2016 found that embryos that were frozen and then thawed had a 7 percentage-point advantage in leading to live births among women with PCOS.
“Now these two papers, equally large and done in non-PCOS patients, show that in terms of live birth, which is what we care about, there is no difference,” said Christos Coutifaris, a doctor at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Medicine in Philadelphia. “So to apply the rule to everybody that we should freeze your embryos is probably not correct.”
This discovery means that doctors treating patients who don’t have PCOS may now implant one embryo at a time instead of multiple embryos at once, which can often lead to multiple births. Implanting one embryo at a time — without sacrificing the likelihood of successful pregnancy — lowers the risks associated with IVF.
“Among infertile women without the polycystic ovary syndrome who were undergoing IVF, the transfer of frozen embryos did not result in significantly higher rates of ongoing pregnancy or live birth than the transfer of fresh embryos,” one of the studies concluded.
Frozen embryo transfers are also more expensive than fresh embryo transfers, so this finding could help people undergoing IVF save money on the pricy frozen embryo transfer cost. One of the studies also found that for women with higher levels of progesterone, a thawed frozen embryo could be best.
Source: Fortune