Autologous endometrial coculture in patients with IVF failure: outcome of the first 1,030 cases. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: To analyze the effectiveness of autologous endometrial coculture (AECC) in improving embryo quality and pregnancy rates in 1,030 consecutive cycles of in vitro fertilization-embryo transfer (IVF-ET) utilizing AECC from January 1996 to December 2001. STUDY DESIGN: Embryos from each of 1,030 patients allocated to growth on AECC were analyzed for outcome. All patients had previously undergone failed IVF cycles. During a luteal phase biopsy (5-12 days after the luteinizing hormone surge) performed prior to the treatment cycle, glandular (G) and stromal (S) endometrial cells were isolated by enzymatic digestion and separated based on differential sedimentation rates. These cells were cryopreserved, then plated as a 50%/50% combination of G and S cells prior to embryo exposure. The conditioned medium was changed every 2 days. Embryos were randomly grown on endometrial coculture (ECC) or conventional media if > 6 oocytes were normally fertilized. Otherwise, all embryos were grown on AECC. RESULTS: The patients' mean age was 36.9 (+/-3.1) years. The patients had on average a history of 3.1 (+/- 1.7) failed prior attempts. When comparing a previous cycle (same institution only), the cleaved embryos on day 3 were of an improved quality (6.8+/-1.2 vs. 5.5+/-1.0 blastomeres and 14.6% +/- 9.3 vs. 27.2% +/- 9.8 fragmentation, P <.05). Twenty-two (2.13%) patients did not undergo ET secondary to poor embryonic development. Overall positive and clinical pregnancy rates of 49.8% and 41.5% were noted, respectively. Age remained the most important predictor of outcome. CONCLUSION: We demonstrated a significant improvement in embryo quality with ECC. We also demonstrated that patients with a poor prognosis secondary to prior IVF failures can have a good outcome when utilizing AECC.

publication date

  • June 1, 2004

Research

keywords

  • Embryo Transfer
  • Endometrium
  • Fertilization in Vitro
  • Infertility, Female

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 2942639547

PubMed ID

  • 15283055

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 49

issue

  • 6