Azadeh Ghaheri1, Aliakbar Rasekhi1, Reza Omani Samani2, Ebrahim Hajizadeh3. 1. Department of Biostatistics, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran. 2. Department of Epidemiology and Reproductive Health, Reproductive Epidemiology Research Center, Royan Institute for Reproductive Biomedicine, ACECR, Tehran, Iran.Electronic address: samani@royaninstitute.org. 3. Department of Biostatistics, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran. Electronic address: hajizadeh@modares.ac.ir.
In Iran, the average rate of infertility, primary and secondary
infertility and current infertility is estimated to be
10.9% [95% confidence intervals (CI): 7.4-14.4], 10.6%
(95% CI: 5.3-16.0), 2.7% (95% CI: 1.9-3.5) and 3.3%
(95% CI: 2.7-3.8), respectively (1). Currently, assisted
reproductive technology (ART) is increasingly used as a
widely accepted treatment for infertile couples (2). The
increase in popularity of ART, the factor influencing its
outcome and the importance of success rate have motivated
researchers towards modeling ART success rates and
identifying factors that affect it in different ways (3-5).An in vitro fertilization (IVF) process involves retrieving
eggs (oocytes) and sperm from female and male, respectively
and allowing sperm to fertilize the eggs; the
resulting embryo(s) are then transferred to the uterus
and hormones are administrated to aid embryo implantation
(6). Women undergoing IVF should go successfully
through multiple points during the procedure (i.e., chemical
pregnancy, clinical pregnancy, having no spontaneous
abortion (SAB) and a successful delivery) to achieve live
births; therefore, in IVF data, success probabilities at each
stage are conditional on success at the previous stage.
Furthermore, pregnancy outcomes are believed to be correlated
within different cycles of a woman and women’s
reproductive outcomes in previous ART cycles are believed
to influence the outcomes of their current cycle; so,
there is a need to consider previous cycles data rather than
simply considering those of the current cycle.Most studies on ART data have only inspected a part of
infertile women’s data (7-10). Multiple types of IVF failure
and multiple IVF cycles experienced by each woman,
have not simultaneously been considered in previous
studies. Maity et al. (11) presented an approach based on
ideas of discrete survival analysis of IVF data with multiple
cycles and multiple failure types for each individual.
Generalized estimating equations (GEE), which consider
the correlation within clusters, can be used to fit the model presented in their study. In case of ART data, the cluster would be the woman and the cycles each woman undergoing the procedure would be the observation (subunit) within the cluster.In the GEE analysis it is assumed that, the response is independent
from the number of observations in the cluster
(the cluster size) (12). However, in IVF data, the number
of cycles that an infertile woman undergoes is believed
to be associated with the success/failure of IVF outcome
(known as informative cluster size). The model presented
by Maity et al. (11) does not consider informative cluster
size. In the present study, a cluster-weighted GEE (CWGEE)
was used to model the factors associated with binary
outcome of success/failure at different stages during
IVF cycles while handling informative cluster size. The
results were then compared with those of GEE model.
Materials and Methods
This historical cohort study includes 996 cycles of 511 infertile
women who were enrolled in ART treatments between
April 2011 and March 2012 in Royan institute, Iran. Only
women who experienced embryo transfer were eligible to be
included in the present analysis. All variables in this study
were defined based data extracted from the medical record
of the individuals, by trained nurses. The outcome variable
was success or failure at four stages: i. Chemical pregnancy
[a transient increase in serum beta-human chorionic gonadotropin
(ß-hCG)], ii. Clinical pregnancy (presence of an
intrauterine gestational sac), iii. Spontaneous abortion (pregnancy
loss before 20 completed weeks of pregnancy), and
iv. Delivery (live birth of at least one baby).Cycles resulted in failure types other than the four
above-mentioned ones, were excluded from the study and
couples who required donation or gestational carrier, were
not eligible for enrollment. Covariates considered in this
study were women’s age (under 35, 35 to 37, 38 to 40,
above 40), type of cycle (fresh or frozen embryo transfer),
the number of embryos transferred and having polycystic
ovarian syndrome (PCOS) during IVF cycles. Some other
measured covariates were woman-specific, such as age at
the first cycle while some others were cycle-specific, such
as type of cycle or the number of embryos transferred.The study was approved by the Ethics board of research
of Royan institute (Ethical code: EC/90/1086). Informed
consent was obtained from all subjects when they intended
to start the treatment. Subjects were assured that the
results would be published following statistical evaluations
and no personal data would be disclosed.
Statistical analysis
The outcome at each stage (chemical pregnancy, clinical
pregnancy, spontaneous abortion (SAB) and delivery)
was considered as the binary response variable representing
the success or failure of the stage. The probability of
success occurrence at a specific stage of ART cycle, could
be associated with the stage, cycle number, and covariates
of interest. The main challenge is considering the correlations
among repeated cycles of each woman, as well as
correlations among the outcomes of multiple stages within
each cycle. To consider these correlations, GEEs were used
according to the model presented by Maity et al. (11), to
assess the influence of covariates (women’s age, type of cycle,
number of embryos transferred and having PCOS) on
the binary outcomes and calculation of odds ratio (OR) and
95% CI. In usual GEE analysis, it is assumed that the outcome
is independent of the number of observations in each
cluster. However, concerning IVF data, the cluster size is
believed to be informative or non-ignorable. In this study, a
CWGEE was also fitted to handle informative cluster size.
Stata software, version 13 (Stata Corp, College Station,
TX, USA) was used for statistical analyses.
Results
This study includes 511 women with a total of 996 IVF
cycles, each woman having 1-3 cycles leading to embryo
transfer. The mean (SD) age of women was 35.75 (5.12)
years old and 86 (16.8%) of women had PCOS. Among the
cycles included in this study, 585 (59%) were cycles with
fresh embryo transfer and the median (inter quartile range)
of the number of embryos ready for transfer was 3 (2-3).Since the number of cycles that each woman experienced
is reversely associated with the success/failure
at different stages, conditional on other predictors (OR:
0.68, 95% CI: 0.52-0.89, P=0.005), cluster size is believed
to be informative and CWGEE has been suggested
for handling this situation (13).GEE and CWGEE models used in this study incorporated
the data from repeated IVF cycles and multiple stages,
with a separate intercepts for stage (Table 1). According
to this table, age was associated with odds of success in
CWGEE model as women of 38-40 years old were less
likely to have successful IVF outcome than women under
35 years old. However, this association was not statistically
significant in the usual GEE model. Based on this
table, higher number of transferred embryos is associated
with an increase in the odds of success in a way that one
unit increase in the number of transferred embryos is associated
with 1.18 and 1.21-fold increase in the odds of
success in unweighted and weighted GEE models, respectively.
Having PCOS was associated with lower odds of
success in IVF procedures but this association was not
statistically significant in either models. Receiving frozen
embryo transfers was associated with more than 2-fold
increase in the odds of success in both models.
Table 1
Relationship between IVF outcomes and IVF/participants characteristics
To explore the differing effect of fresh and frozen embryo
transfer on the odds of success at various stages, the
interaction term between type of embryo(s) transferred
and failure type was included in the model. Although
women receiving fresh embryo transfer showed significantly
better results in clinical pregnancy, from then on,
women receiving frozen embryo transfer could successfully
continue in the same way as those receiving fresh
embryos (Fig .1).
Fig.1
Log odds of success at multiple points during the IVF cycle with 95% confidence intervals.
IVF; In vitro fertilization and SAB; Spontaneous abortion.
Relationship between IVF outcomes and IVF/participants characteristicsIVF; In vitro fertilization, GEE; Generalized estimating equations, SAB; Spontaneous abortion, PCOS; Polycystic ovarian syndrome, CI; Confidence intervals, and OR; odds ratio.Log odds of success at multiple points during the IVF cycle with 95% confidence intervals.IVF; In vitro fertilization and SAB; Spontaneous abortion.
Discussion
There are some existing approaches to model IVF data including multiple cycles with multiple failure types (9). Considering the whole existing IVF data set for each woman can lead to better estimations of the covariates effects than the standard approach which only consider the first IVF cycle or model each IVF outcome separately.Since the number of cycles experienced by each infertile woman is believed to be associated with the success/failure of IVF outcome, studies on these type of data involve informative cluster size and GEE and CWGEE, might show different results as GEE assumes that cluster size is non-informative. This historical cohort study on Iranian infertile women also demonstrated strong reverse associations between the number of cycles and odds of success in IVF outcomes, indicating the presence of informative cluster size (12). Moreover, the result of this study showed that having more transferred embryos is significantly associated with higher odds of success which corroborates the findings of previous research in this field (14, 15).Based on both GEE and CWGEE, our results also suggest that successful IVF outcomes seem to be associated with performing frozen embryo transfer compared to fresh embryo transfer. This could be explained by the fact that the endometrium is more receptive in frozen embryo transfer during the endometrial priming than in fresh embryo cycles; therefore, frozen embryo cycles could lead to a better embryo-endometrium synchrony (16). Despite the potential advantages of transferring frozen embryos, the effect of patient-specific variables or center-specific factors (e.g. laboratory setup and protocols), should be investigated in well-designed clinical trials (17). Exploring the differing effect of frozen embryo transfer on the odds of success at various stages showed that the likelihood of successful clinical pregnancy is significantly lower in frozen embryo transferred cycles which could be explained by the fact that usually the best-quality embryos are chosen for the fresh embryo transfer and this is in agreement with previous studies (18, 19). Continuing through the
cycles, the difference between frozen and fresh embryo
transfer was not statistically significant which is probably
due to the well-balanced embryo-endometrium interaction
(16).In our study, having PCOS was not significantly associated
with odds of success in IVF procedures in either of
the models which was not consistent with some previous
research that found that women with PCOS have an increased
prevalence of miscarriage, both after spontaneous
and induced ovulation (10). However, this result is
consistent with that of other studies which showed similar
pregnancy and live birth rate per cycle in PCOS and non-
PCOS women (20). Our limitation to include women’s
BMI in this study could influence the results as the impact
of BMI on IVF outcomes and its interaction with PCOS
was not considered.A great deal of previous research has indicated significant
associations between women age and fertility (21,
22). In this study, although this association was not significant
in GEE model, CWGG model confirms that being
in the age category of 38-40 years old was reversely associated
with odds of success compared to women aging
less than 35 years old. The difference between the women
aged under 35 years and those of over 40 years was not
statistically significant which could be due to the limited
number of women aged over 40 years old in our study.In this study, data from repeated IVF cycles was used by
including the correlation among them; however, not including
some variables of couples undergoing IVF, such
as pretreatment variables, embryo quality, oocyte and
sperm quality and also stimulation and laboratory variables
is a limitation of this study. Data on previous cycles,
which infertile women might have undergone in other infertility
centers, was not included in this study due to lack
of a national registry.
Conclusion
Frozen embryo transfer was positively associated with
odds of success compared to cycles with fresh embryo
transfer; but, cycles with fresh embryo transfer had better
results in clinical pregnancy compared to frozen embryo
transfer. The number of embryos transferred and women’s
age were significantly associated with odds of success.
Authors: Bruce S Shapiro; Said T Daneshmand; Forest C Garner; Martha Aguirre; Cynthia Hudson; Shyni Thomas Journal: Fertil Steril Date: 2011-07-06 Impact factor: 7.329
Authors: James F Smith; Michael L Eisenberg; Susan G Millstein; Robert D Nachtigall; Natalia Sadetsky; Marcelle I Cedars; Patricia P Katz Journal: Fertil Steril Date: 2010-07-25 Impact factor: 7.329
Authors: E M E W Heijnen; M J C Eijkemans; E G Hughes; J S E Laven; N S Macklon; B C J M Fauser Journal: Hum Reprod Update Date: 2005-08-25 Impact factor: 15.610