Literature DB >> 1521654

Improved pregnancy rate after transfer of embryos grown in human fallopian tubal cell coculture.

A Bongso1, S C Ng, C Y Fong, C Anandakumar, B Marshall, R Edirisinghe, S Ratnam.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the embryonic behavior in vitro and the pregnancy and implantation rates of embryos grown in a human ampullary cell coculture system.
DESIGN: In a prospective study, two pronuclei embryos were cultured on human ampullary feeder layers up to the two to six-cell and blastocyst stages and replaced either as tubal, uterine, or sequential transfers.
SETTING: Assisted reproductive technology program in a university-based hospital. PATIENTS: Fifty women with a mean age of 35.6 years who went through a single coculture cycle. Thirty of the patients were admitted for in vitro fertilization (IVF) and 20 for tubal embryo transfer (TET).
RESULTS: The overall clinical pregnancy rate (PR) for all 50 patients was 44% per cycle (IVF, 37%; TET, 55%) and the implantation rate was 31.8% (IVF, 31.0%; TET, 32.6%). Sixty-eight percent of pregnant patients were over 35 years, and 68% had two previously failed assisted reproduction cycles. Five of 9 patients who received sequential transfers became pregnant. Three of the 22 pregnancies aborted (2 after sequential transfer), and there was one ectopic. Overall, 88% of two to six-cell stage embryos were of good quality.
CONCLUSIONS: The human ampullary coculture system produces better quality embryos, increased numbers of blastocysts with improved PRs and implantation rates. The beneficial effects of the feeder layer may be through the release of embryotrophic factors and detoxification of the medium by the cells. Coculture is a new concept in assisted reproduction and has tremendous potential in boosting conception rates by mimicking the in vivo environment.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1521654     DOI: 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)55265-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fertil Steril        ISSN: 0015-0282            Impact factor:   7.329


  18 in total

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Review 3.  Potential use of embryo coculture with human in vitro fertilization procedures.

Authors:  J K Thibodeaux; R A Godke
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4.  Autologous endometrial co-culture in patients with repeated failures of implantation after in vitro fertilization-embryo transfer.

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8.  The human oviduct transcriptome reveals an anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, secretory and matrix-stable environment during embryo transit.

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9.  Coculture with homologous oviductal cells improved the implantation of human embryos--a prospective randomized control trial.

Authors:  W S Yeung; E Y Lau; S T Chan; P C Ho
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10.  Peptides extracted from Vero cell cultures overcome the blastocyst block of mouse embryos in a serum-free medium.

Authors:  H F Chen; H N Ho; S U Chen; K H Chao; H R Lin; S C Huang; T Y Lee; Y S Yang
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