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Infertility treatments may raise preterm birth risk

Couples who conceive through certain types of infertility treatment may have a higher-than-normal likelihood of having a premature baby, a new study suggests. Danish researchers found that among more than 20,000 women who gave birth at their hospital between 1989 and 2006, those who had conceived through in-vitro fertilization (IVF) or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) had a higher risk of preterm delivery. Of the 730 babies born to women who underwent IVF or ICSI, nearly 8 percent were premature and 1.5 percent were very premature — born before the 32nd week of . A normal lasts 40 weeks. In comparison, roughly 5 percent of babies born to fertile mothers were premature, and 0.6 percent were born very preterm, the researchers report in the journal Fertility and Sterility. When the researchers accounted for factors like the mother’s age, weight and exposure to cigarette smoking, the IVF and ICSI procedures were still linked to a 53 percent greater risk of preterm delivery and a doubling in the odds of very premature birth. Other forms of fertility treatment — namely, fertility drugs and insemination — were not related to the risk of preterm delivery. Nor was the higher risk with IVF and ICSI explained by elevated rates of twin or higher-order births. The study included only singleton births. Together, the researchers say, the findings suggest that something about the IVF and ICSI procedures themselves might raise the odds of preterm birth. Both IVF and ICSI involve joining a woman’s egg and a man’s sperm in a lab dish, then — if fertilization is successful — transferring one or more embryos to the woman’s uterus. ICSI is typically used for male fertility problems, including a low sperm count or poor sperm quality. It involves isolating a single sperm and injecting it directly into the egg. “The IVF/ICSI procedures include hormone stimulation and mechanical procedures. Both of these factors may influence the risk of preterm delivery,” lead researcher Dr. Kirsten Wisborg, of Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark, told Reuters in an email. The fact that other forms of fertility treatment were not linked to preterm delivery suggests that infertility itself is not to blame, according to Wisborg. However, she pointed out, couples who undergo IVF or ICSI may have a different “reproductive pathology” than those who conceive via fertility drugs or insemination, as they frequently have been infertile for a longer period and have failed to conceive through those “low-tech” fertility treatments. There may also be other factors, unmeasured in this study, that put women who undergo IVF or ICSI at greater risk of preterm delivery, Wisborg said

Original Source of Infertility treatments may raise preterm birth risk

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