| Literature DB >> 34218388 |
Michel De Vos1,2, Michaël Grynberg3,4, Tuong M Ho5, Ye Yuan6, David F Albertini7, Robert B Gilchrist8.
Abstract
Oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM) is an assisted reproductive technology designed to obtain mature oocytes following culture of immature cumulus-oocyte complexes collected from antral follicles. Although IVM has been practiced for decades and is no longer considered experimental, the uptake of IVM in clinical practice is currently limited. The purpose of this review is to ensure reproductive medicine professionals understand the appropriate use of IVM drawn from the best available evidence supporting its clinical potential and safety in selected patient groups. This group of scientists and fertility specialists, with expertise in IVM in the ART laboratory and/or clinic, explore here the development of IVM towards acquisition of a non-experimental status and, in addition, critically appraise the current and future role of IVM in human ART.Entities:
Keywords: Fertility preservation; In vitro maturation (IVM); Onco-fertility; Oocyte maturation; Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34218388 PMCID: PMC8266966 DOI: 10.1007/s10815-021-02263-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assist Reprod Genet ISSN: 1058-0468 Impact factor: 3.412
Fig. 1Landmarks in the development of human IVM. Major stages in the development of IVM beginning with studies using human oocytes and initial attempts at IVF and during 1990–2000 decades, first uses in the clinic, are shown. The last decade has witnessed modest expansion of clinical usage, especially in areas of onco-fertility and fertility preservation
Fig. 2Differences between conventional IVF and IVM. The principal differences between conventional IVF and IVM are that in IVM cycles, patients receive minimal or no ovarian stimulation prior to OPU, oocytes are collected from small-medium sized antral follicles, and oocytes are meiotically matured in vitro from the germinal vesicle (GV) to metaphase II (MII) stage. Thereafter, mature IVM oocytes are treated exactly as per mature oocytes from conventional IVF. Adapted from [25]
Fig. 3Oocyte–cumulus cell communication is fundamental to IVM success. Left, image of human MII oocyte collected after conventional ovarian stimulation and prior to removal of cumulus cells; note extensions from corona cells towards the oocyte surface. Confocal projection on the right is of an immature germinal vesicle (GV) stage bovine oocyte illustrating compact corona cells (top) sending numerous transzonal projections (arrow) that terminate on the oocyte cell surface. Alexa 555-phalloidin was used to label actin filaments in confocal image
Fig. 4Major IVM protocols. A The original IVM protocol [8], where immature, GV-stage COCs are matured in vitro in one step to MII. Patients may or may not receive prior FSH priming as in either case all oocytes are at the GV stage at OPU. B A biphasic IVM protocol is a small variation on standard IVM, the notable difference being the additional pre-IVM culture step. Here, meiosis of immature cumulus-enclosed oocytes is deliberately arrested for ~ 24 h, before moving COCs into a meiosis promoting medium. Examples include the SPOM- and CAPA-IVM protocols. Patients may receive prior FSH priming, but not hCG priming, as the latter is incompatible with the need for intact compact COCs in this platform. C Patients receive a bolus of hCG prior to OPU, +/− prior FSH priming. A proportion (~ 10–20%) of oocytes are collected at the MII stage, some resume meiosis in vivo but are not mature (germinal vesicle breakdown (GVB) or MI), and the majority of oocytes are at the GV stage. The different stages of meiosis at OPU necessitate differing treatment in the laboratory: MII require fertilization on the day of OPU, whereas the maturing and immature oocytes require IVM culture. D This is the maturation in vitro of immature GV-stage oocytes collected from conventional IVF cycles after OS and ovulation triggering, mostly with hCG [38]. These are commonly regarded as medically unusable oocytes and are usually discarded in most IVF clinics [39]. These oocytes are usually naked, as oocytes are denuded of cumulus cells after OPU prior to ICSI; hence, rescue IVM oocytes are invariably cultured in a denuded state from the GV to MII stage in vitro
Advantages and disadvantages of the major IVM protocols
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|
• Simple one-step culture system [ • All oocytes at the same immature meiotic stage at the start of culture [ | • Relatively low MII rates at ~ 50% [ • Modest embryo yield and live birth rates [ | |
• Relatively high MII rates at ~ 70% [ • Good embryo yield and live birth rates [ | • Additional laboratory burden due the extra day of culture [ • Has only recently been introduced in a limited number of IVM labs [ | |
| • Relatively high MII rates at ~ 70% [ | • Oocytes are collected at a mixture of meiotic stages [ • Additional laboratory burden due to at least two rounds of ICSI per OPU [ • IVM of GVB oocyte cohort is suboptimal as the exact extent of their meiotic progression at start cannot be determined [ • Modest live birth rates [ • Prohibitive to the use of any pre-IVM culture approach [ | |
• GV oocytes are common in conventional IVF patients • May generate additional embryos for transfer [ | • Oocytes commonly have meiotic defects [ • IVM in the absence of cumulus cell support → poor oocyte quality [ • Questionable safety [ |
Empirical analysis of factors that may modulate the uptake of IVM in different regions
| Regions | Availability of reproductive care services | Out-of-pocket costs for patients | Incentive for IVM for infertility treatment | Incentive for IVM for onco-fertility preservation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Europe | +++ | + | - Reduced efficiency compared to OS - Utilization of freeze-all strategies in high responders - Limited cost savings for the patient | - Utilization will grow as more centers develop expertise in IVM - Focus on OTO-IVM in spite of experimental nature |
| USA and Canada | +++ | +++ | - High cost of ART for patients means prioritizing treatments with maximal efficiency | - Utilization will increase as more centers develop expertise in IVM - Focus on OTO-IVM in spite of experimental nature |
| Russia | +++ | ++ | - Relatively high cost of ART for patients means prioritizing treatments with maximal efficiency | - Utilization will grow as more centers develop expertise in IVM - Focus on OTO-IVM in spite of experimental nature |
| Middle East and Maghreb | ++ | ++ | - High incidence of patients with severe PCOS and underutilized safety measures in high responders - Limited uptake because of lack of experienced centers in the region and perceived complexity of clinical and laboratory IVM procedures | - Limited availability of onco-fertility programs in the region |
| India | +++ | ++ | - High incidence of patients with severe PCOS and underutilized safety measures in high responders - Limited uptake because of lack of experienced centers in the region and perceived complexity of clinical and laboratory IVM procedures | - Utilization will grow as more centers develop expertise in IVM |
| Southeast Asia | ++ | ++ | - High relative cost of gonadotropins - Increasing uptake in view of emerging number of centers in the region developing a high level of expertise in IVM | - Utilization will grow as more centers develop expertise in IVM - Focus on OTO-IVM in spite of experimental nature |
| China | ++ | ++ | - High cost of ART for patients means prioritizing treatments with maximal efficiency | - Limited availability of onco-fertility programs in the region |
| Japan and South Korea | +++ | + | - Reduced efficiency compared to OS - Utilization of freeze-all strategies in high responders - Limited cost savings for the patient | - Utilization will grow as more centers develop expertise in IVM - Focus on OTO-IVM in spite of experimental nature |
| Australia and New Zealand | +++ | + | - Reduced efficiency compared to OS - Utilization of freeze-all strategies in high responders - Limited cost savings for the patient | - Utilization will grow as more centers develop expertise in IVM - Focus on OTO-IVM in spite of experimental nature |
| Central and South America | ++ | ++ | - Lack of experienced centers in the region and perceived complexity of clinical and laboratory IVM procedures | - Limited availability of onco-fertility programs in the region |
| Middle and Southern Africa | + | ++ | - Lack of experienced centers in the region and perceived complexity of clinical and laboratory IVM procedures | - Limited availability of onco-fertility programs in the region |