The effect of two distinct levels of oxygen concentration on embryo development in a sibling oocyte study

Esti Kasterstein, Deborah Strassburger, Daphna Komarovsky, Orna Bern, Alisa Komsky, Arieh Raziel, Shevach Friedler, Raphael Ron-El, Esti Kasterstein, Deborah Strassburger, Daphna Komarovsky, Orna Bern, Alisa Komsky, Arieh Raziel, Shevach Friedler, Raphael Ron-El

Abstract

Purpose: This prospective randomized study used sibling oocytes of 258 women with ≥8 oocytes to compare the effect of 5 % O(2) versus 20 % O(2) concentrations on embryo development and clinical outcome.

Methods: Oocytes of each case were divided between incubators with either 5 % or 20 % O(2) concentration. Outcome measures were fertilization, cleavage, embryo quality, blastocyst formation, and implantation, pregnancy and live birth rates.

Results: Fertilization and cleavage rates were similar in both groups. The 5 % O(2) group had significantly more blastomeres (P < 0.05) and more top-quality embryos on day 3 (P < 0.02), as well as significantly more available embryos for transfer (31.6 % vs. 23.1 % for the 20 % O(2) group; P < 0.0001). There were significantly more cycles with good embryos in the 5 % group (76/258) than in the 20 % group (38/258) (P < 0.0001). Implantation and pregnancy rates were significantly higher for 5 % O(2) embryos (P < 0.03 and P < 0.05, respectively). Live birth rates per embryo transfer were 34.2 % and 15.8 %, respectively, P < 0.05.

Conclusions: Implantation, pregnancy and live birth rates are higher, and more good quality embryos are available for transfer and freezing with reduced rather than with atmospheric oxygen concentrations during embryo incubation.

Source: PubMed

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