Effect of parental and ART treatment characteristics on perinatal outcomes

STUDY QUESTION: Do parental characteristics and treatment with ART affect perinatal outcomes in singleton pregnancies? SUMMARY ANSWER: Both parental and ART treatment characteristics affect perinatal outcomes in singleton pregnancies. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Previous studies have shown that singleton pregnancies resulting from ART are at risk of preterm birth. ART children are lighter at birth after correction for duration of gestation and at increased risk of congenital abnormalities compared to naturally conceived children. This association is confounded by parental characteristics that are a... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Pontesilli, M.
Hof, M. H.
Ravelli, A. C.J.
van Altena, A. J.
Soufan, A. T.
Mol, B. W.
Kostelijk, E. H.
Slappendel, E.
Consten, D.
Cantineau, A. E.P.
van der Westerlaken, L. A.J.
van Inzen, W.
Dumoulin, J. C.M.
Ramos, L.
Baart, E. B.
Broekmans, F. J.M.
Rijnders, P. M.
Curfs, M. H.J.M.
Mastenbroek, S.
Repping, S.
Roseboom, T. J.
Painter, R. C.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Schlagwörter: ART / ART safety / ICSI / IVF / perinatal outcomes / subfertility / Humans / Parents / Male / Pregnancy / Embryo Transfer / Premature Birth/epidemiology / Female / Retrospective Studies / Netherlands/epidemiology / Child / Infant / Newborn / Obstetrics and Gynaecology / Reproductive Medicine / Research Support / Non-U.S. Gov't / Journal Article
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29620514
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/443368

STUDY QUESTION: Do parental characteristics and treatment with ART affect perinatal outcomes in singleton pregnancies? SUMMARY ANSWER: Both parental and ART treatment characteristics affect perinatal outcomes in singleton pregnancies. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Previous studies have shown that singleton pregnancies resulting from ART are at risk of preterm birth. ART children are lighter at birth after correction for duration of gestation and at increased risk of congenital abnormalities compared to naturally conceived children. This association is confounded by parental characteristics that are also known to affect perinatal outcomes. It is unclear to which extent parental and ART treatment characteristics independently affect perinatal outcomes. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: All IVF clinics in the Netherlands (n ¼ 13) were requested to provide data on all ART treatment cycles (IVF, ICSI and frozen-thawed embryo transfers (FET)), performed between 1 January 2000, and 1 January 2011, which resulted in a pregnancy. Using probabilistic data-linkage, these data (n ¼ 36 683) were linked to the Dutch Perinatal Registry (Perined), which includes all children born in the Netherlands in the same time period (n ¼ 2 548 977). PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Analyses were limited to singleton pregnancies that resulted from IVF, ICSI or FET cycles. Multivariable models for linear and logistic regression were fitted including parental characteristics as well as ART treatment characteristics. Analyses were performed separately for fresh cycles and for fresh and FET cycles combined. We assessed the impact on the following perinatal outcomes: birth weight, preterm birth below 37 or 32 weeks of gestation, congenital malformations and perinatal mortality. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: The perinatal outcomes of 31 184 out of the 36 683 ART treatment cycles leading to a pregnancy were retrieved through linkage with the Perined (85% linkage). Of those, 23 671 concerned singleton pregnancies resulting from IVF, ICSI or ...