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Evaluation of Clinical Outcomes after Poor-Quality Embryo Transfer and Prognostic Parameters.

Nezaket Kadiogluİnci Kahyaoğluİskender KaplanoğluSerdar DilbazYaprak Engin Üstün
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2023)
We aimed to investigate the clinical results following poor-quality embryo transfer and the parameters to foresee the prognosis. In this study, 2123 cycles that had day 3 and day 5 single-fresh embryo with poor-quality embryo transfers and good-quality embryo transfers were compared. The cycles according to transfer day were evaluated by conducting a subgroup analysis. The correlation between all the obtained demographic characteristics, controlled ovarian stimulation parameters, and cycle results were analysed. Clinical pregnancy was established in 53 patients that underwent transfer in the poor-quality embryo group (14.9%). Of these patients, 36 had live birth (live birth rate per clinical pregnancy 67.9%). In cleavage-stage embryos, live birth rates per clinical pregnancy were higher in poor-quality blastocyst transfer. When analysing the factors affecting live births in the poor-quality embryo group, as the total gonadotropin dose increases, the probability of live birth decreases, as in the probability of hCG positivity. In conclusion, although the probability of pregnancy is low, when clinical pregnancy is established, there is a high chance of having a live birth after poor-quality embryo transfers. This could be regarded as an acceptable option in cycles when only poor-quality embryos are available.
Keyphrases
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • quality improvement
  • end stage renal disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • chronic kidney disease
  • pregnant women
  • randomized controlled trial
  • patient reported outcomes