| Literature DB >> 30964078 |
Abstract
This review highlights the challenges, priority areas of research and planning, strategies for regulation of services and the need to develop guidelines and laws for fertility treatments during mid-life. The success rate of all treatments is poor in advanced age women because of declining ovarian reserve and natural fertility. There is often a need of third-party involvement which has its own ethical, legal and medical issues. Welfare of children born to older women and early death of parents are important concerns. Most of the new techniques such as the pre-implantation genetic diagnosis, oocyte augmentation, use of stem cells or artificial gametes, ovarian tissue preservation and ovarian transplantation are directed to improve, preserve or replace the declining ovarian reserve. These techniques are costly and have limited availability, safety and efficacy data. Continued research and policies are required to keep pace with these techniques. The other important issues include the patients' personal autonomy and right of self-determination, welfare of offspring, public vs. private funding for research and development of new technologies vs. indiscriminate use of unproven technology. It is important that mid-life fertility is recognized as a distinct area of human reproduction requiring special considerations.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced maternal age; assisted reproduction techniques; fertility policy planning; fertility services; maternal morbidity; mid-life fertility
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30964078 PMCID: PMC6469367 DOI: 10.4103/ijmr.IJMR_647_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Med Res ISSN: 0971-5916 Impact factor: 2.375
Key thrust areas
| 1. Definition of midlife in relation to fertility |
| 2. Increasing age of pregnancy |
| 3. Increasing demand for fertility services |
| 4. Agerelated decline in fertility |
| 5. Do Indian women lose fertility early? |
| 6. Overestimation and fertile lifespan |
| 7. Artificial extension of fertility |
| 8. Higher failure rates of all kinds of treatments |
| 9. Third party reproduction |
| 10. Maternal risks |
| 12. Impact on health and longevity |
| 13. Perinatal morbidity and mortality |
| 14. Welfare of the offspring |
| 15. Use of experimental and costly treatments |
| 16. Fertility issues of the ageing male |
| 17. Age cut-off for fertility services |
Reasons for increased demand of fertility services
| 1. Increasing age of marriage |
| 2. Delayed planning of first child |
| 3. Increasing divorce rate |
| 4. Carrier conscious female population |
| 5. Increasing international migration |
| 6. High road traffic accident rate and loss of grownup children |
| 7. Availability of donor egg technology |
| 8. Artificial extension of fertility due to fertility preservation |
| 9. Increased survival of cancer patients |
| 10. Lack of awareness regarding age-related fertility decline |
| 11. Glamorizing of older age births by media |
| 12. Overestimation of success of IVF outcome irrespective of age |
| 13. Grossly inadequate infertility and ART services in government sector |
| 14. Increased affordability in mid-life |
| 15. Poor availability of adoption services |
| 16. Mushrooming and commercialization of IVF centres |
| 17. Lack of laws and guidelines |
ART, assisted reproduction technique; IVF, in vitro fertilization
Reasons for opting/refusal of ART at advanced age
| Patients' viewpoint | Clinicians' viewpoint |
|---|---|
| Want to do their best efforts | Fear of litigation in case of failure |
| Perceive 1 per cent also as hopeful. Holding the proverbial straw | Minimizing harm to patient |
| Want to know if they can still produce eggs or embryos even if it does not lead to pregnancy | Avoidance of frustration associated with providing futile treatment |
| Perceive embryo transfer or an early abortion which removes the stigma of infertility | Right of refusal of treatment which they consider inappropriate remaining in legal framework |
| Satisfaction of having tried and experienced IVF | Some may believe that it is their duty to withhold a treatment which cannot fulfil its intended goal |
| Dissatisfaction with a previous attempt at a different centre | Matter of integrity. Wasteful or even fraudulent or misguiding patients in hopeless situations |
| Cannot accept donor eggs | Better success rate with other options such as egg donation |
IVF, in vitro fertilization; ART, assisted reproduction technique Source: Ref. 56
Upper legal age limit for availing infertility services
| Points in favour of upper age limit | Points against upper age limit |
|---|---|
| Potential increased risk of maternal morbidity and mortality | Potential for natural pregnancy to the average age of menopause, |
| Risk of bereavement of children born at advanced age | Increased in life expectancy of mothers giving birth at advanced age |
| Risk of psychological, social and financial burden on children | Family support |
| Pre-existing comorbid medical conditions which are likely to reduce life expectancy independent of pregnancy | Improving life expectancy with treatment in all medical conditions |
| Emotional and not well thought of decisions | Reproductive autonomy and carrier concerns |
| Unborn baby has no choice or rights | Same with natural pregnancy |
| Social pressure to bear a child at any age against women’s wishes | Social pressure of abandonment and remarriage of husband |
| Underestimating the parenting needs at advanced age | Family support |
| Unscrupulous canters providing services in the absence of any law at any age | Demand and supply |
| State cost burden to look after these mothers and children even if self-financed | Self-financing Countries with negative populations encouraging the trend |
| Guidelines for insurance companies | At present, self-financed |