(Press-News.org) Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers have identified what may be a major factor behind the increased risk of two adverse outcomes in pregnancies conceived through in vitro fertilization (IVF). Two papers published in the journal Fertility and Sterility support the hypothesis that extremely high estrogen levels at the time of embryo transfer increase the risk that infants will be born small for their gestational age and the risk of preeclampsia, a dangerous condition that can threaten the lives of both mother and child. They also outline a protocol that reduced those risks in a small group of patients.
Both papers addressed IVF pregnancies resulting in a single live birth, not multiple-birth pregnancies which continue to be the most significant risk factor of any assisted reproduction technology. But even single-birth IVF pregnancies are more likely than unassisted single-birth pregnancies to result in premature delivery, low birth weight and other serious complications. In the January 2013 issue of the journal, the investigators at the MGH's Vincent Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology report that freezing embryos of women who had excessively elevated estrogen at the time of egg retrieval, followed by embryo transfer in a later reproductive cycle when hormonal levels were closer to those of a natural cycle, significantly reduced the percentage of small newborns and eliminated the incidence of preeclampsia in a small group of patients.
"We've known for a long time that singleton pregnancies conceived by IVF were at higher risk of these adverse outcomes, but the reasons were unknown," says Anthony Imudia, MD, of the MGH Fertility Center, lead author of both articles. "Now we know which facet of IVF might be responsible, which will allow us to identify at-risk patients and implement ways of averting those risks."
At most fertility centers, IVF involves a sequence of coordinated events that stimulate the ovaries in a way that leads to the growth and maturation of several eggs at the same time. Prior to ovulation the eggs are retrieved for fertilization outside the mother's body. If fertilization is successful, embryos that appear to be developing normally are transferred into the woman's uterus within 5 days of egg retrieval in a process called fresh embryo transfer.
Egg cells grow and mature in ovarian sacs called follicles, which release estrogen, so the development of multiple maturing follicles can lead to significantly elevated estrogen levels. Animal studies have suggested that excessively elevated estrogen early in pregnancy can interfere with the development of the placenta, and other research has associated placental abnormalities with increased risk for both preeclampsia and delivery of small newborns.
In the June 2012 issue of Fertility and Sterility, the MGH team reported that – among almost 300 IVF pregnancies that resulted in the birth of a single infant from 2005 through 2010 – the women whose estrogen levels right before egg retrieval were highest had significantly greater incidence of preeclampsia and of delivering infants small for their gestational age. Women whose peak estrogen levels were at or above the 90th percentile had a nine-fold greater risk of a small infant and a five-fold greater risk of preeclampsia than women with lower peak estrogen levels.
To follow up that observation, the MGH team examined how a protocol instituted for mothers at risk of a complication of fertility treatment called ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) might affect the apparent risks associated with extremely high estrogen levels. At the MGH Fertility Center, if the estrogen levels for IVF patients exceed 4,500 pg/mL on the day they are scheduled to receive a hormonal trigger of final egg cell maturation – indicating increased risk for OHSS – standard practice is to counsel patients on alternatives. These included postponing the procedure until a future IVF cycle or proceeding with egg retrieval and fertilization but freezing the embryos for implantation in a later cycle to allow time for the ovary to recover.
The team's January Fertility and Sterility report compared the outcomes of 20 patients who choose to have their embryos frozen and implanted later because of their risk of OHSS with those of 32 patients with pre-retrieval estrogen levels over 3,450 pg/mL who proceeded with fresh embryo transfer. Only 10 percent of the infants of mothers who choose embryo freezing and transfer in a subsequent cycle were small for their gestational age, compared with 35 percent of the infants of mothers who had fresh embryo transfer. While the incidence of preeclampsia after fresh embryo transfer was almost 22 percent, none of the patients who chose embryo freezing with later implantation developed preeclampsia.
"Our center takes a very individualized and conservative approach to ovarian stimulation, so fewer than 10 percent of our patients had extremely high estrogen levels of greater than 3,450 pg/mL," says Imudia, who is an instructor in Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Biology at Harvard Medical School. "If other centers validate our findings by following the same approach and achieving similar outcomes, we would recommend that each patient's hormonal dosage be adjusted to try and keep her estrogen levels below 3,000 pg/mL. If the estrogen level exceeds this threshold, the patient could be counseled regarding freezing all embryos for transfer in subsequent cycles, when her hormone levels are closer to that of a natural cycle."
###Thomas Toth, MD, director of the IVF Unit in the MGH Fertility Center is senior author of the January Fertility and Sterility article and was a co-author of the June report. Additional co-authors of the papers are Aaron Styer, MD, who is senior author of the June article and a co-author of the January paper, Diane Wright, PhD, and Joseph Doyle, MD, MGH Fertility Center; Anjali Kaimal, MD, MAS, MGH Obstetrics and Gynecology; and Awoniyi Awonuga, MD, Wayne State University School of Medicine.
Massachusetts General Hospital (www.massgeneral.org), founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with an annual research budget of more than $775 million and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine. In July 2012, MGH moved into the number one spot on the 2012-13 U.S. News & World Report list of "America's Best Hospitals."
Extremely high estrogen levels may underlie complications of single-birth IVF pregnancies
Freezing embryos for later transfer when hormone levels were lower reduced undersize infants, eliminated preeclampsia in small study
2013-02-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New type of gene that regulates tumor suppressor PTEN identified
2013-02-25
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have identified a new so-called pseudogene that regulates the tumour-suppressing PTEN gene. They hope that this pseudogene will be able to control PTEN to reverse the tumour process, make the cancer tumour more sensitive to chemotherapy and to prevent the development of resistance. The findings, which are published in the scientific journal Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, can be of significance in the future development of cancer drugs.
The development of tumours coincides with the activation of several cancer genes ...
Asthma drug found highly effective in treating chronic, severe hives and itch
2013-02-25
An international team of researchers has found that a once-a-month, high-dose injection of a commonly used asthma drug is highly effective in treating teens and adults chronically afflicted with hives and severe, itchy rash. The drug, omalizumab, was tested on 323 people at 55 medical centers for whom standard antihistamine therapy failed to quell their underlying, allergy-like reaction, known as chronic idiopathic urticaria or chronic spontaneous urticaria.
"Physicians and patients may now have a fast, safe and well-tolerated treatment option to consider before prescribing ...
Study: Babies born by C-section at risk of developing allergies
2013-02-25
DETROIT – For expectant moms who may contemplate the pros and cons of natural child birth or Caesarian section, a Henry Ford Hospital study suggests that C-section babies are susceptible to developing allergies by age two.
Researchers found that babies born by C-section are five times more likely to develop allergies than babies born naturally when exposed to high levels of common allergens in the home such as those from dogs, cats and dust mites.
The study is being presented Sunday at the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology annual meeting in San Antonio.
"This ...
Scientists find surprising new influence on cancer genes
2013-02-25
LA JOLLA, CA – February 24, 2013 – Small stretches of DNA in the human genome are known as "pseudogenes" because, while their sequences are nearly identical to those of various genes, they have long been thought to be non-coding "junk" DNA.
But now, a new study led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) shows how pseudogenes can regulate the activity of a cancer-related gene called PTEN. The study also shows that pseudogenes can be targeted to control PTEN's activity.
Published in the latest issue of the journal Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, ...
Taking the gamble out of DNA sequencing
2013-02-25
Two USC scientists have developed an algorithm that could help make DNA sequencing affordable enough for clinics – and could be useful to researchers of all stripes.
Andrew Smith, a computational biologist at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, developed the algorithm along with USC graduate student Timothy Daley to help predict the value of sequencing more DNA, to be published in Nature Methods on February 24.
Extracting information from the DNA means deciding how much to sequence: sequencing too little and you may not get the answers you are looking ...
Ability of brain to protect itself from damage revealed
2013-02-25
The origin of an innate ability the brain has to protect itself from damage that occurs in stroke has been explained for the first time.
The Oxford University researchers hope that harnessing this inbuilt biological mechanism, identified in rats, could help in treating stroke and preventing other neurodegenerative diseases in the future.
'We have shown for the first time that the brain has mechanisms that it can use to protect itself and keep brain cells alive,' says Professor Alastair Buchan, Head of the Medical Sciences Division and Dean of the Medical School at Oxford ...
UN sustainable energy initiative could put world on a path to climate targets
2013-02-25
The new study in Nature Climate Change shows that reaching the 3 energy-related objectives proposed by the United Nations in their Sustainable Energy for All (SE4All) initiative, launched in 2011, would reduce emissions of greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change and, in combination with other measures, could help keep global temperature rise from exceeding the internationally agreed target level of 2°C.
"Achievement of the 3 objectives would provide an important entry point into stringent climate protection," says Joeri Rogelj, ETH Zurich researcher and IIASA-affiliated ...
Pain from the brain
2013-02-25
Psychogenic diseases, formerly known as 'hysterical' illnesses, can have many severe symptoms such as painful cramps or paralysis but without any physical explanation. However, new research from the University of Cambridge and UCL (University College London) suggests that individuals with psychogenic disease, that is to say physical illness that stems from emotional or mental stresses, do have brains that function differently. The research was published today, 25 February, in the journal Brain.
Psychogenic diseases may look very similar to illnesses caused by damage to ...
Laser mastery narrows down sources of superconductivity
2013-02-25
UPTON, NY – Identifying the mysterious mechanism underlying high-temperature superconductivity (HTS) remains one of the most important and tantalizing puzzles in physics. This remarkable phenomenon allows electric current to pass with perfect efficiency through materials chilled to subzero temperatures, and it may play an essential role in revolutionizing the entire electricity chain, from generation to transmission and grid-scale storage. Pinning down one of the possible explanations for HTS—fleeting fluctuations called charge-density waves (CDWs)—could help solve the ...
Researchers at IRB Barcelona discover a general mechanism that accelerates tumor development
2013-02-25
Cancer is characterized by uncontrolled cell division and growth. In order to identify new therapeutic targets through which to tackle the disease, scientists seek to clarify the mechanisms that control the expression of genes that favor the development of tumors, in processes such as uncontrolled cell division. Today, Nature has published a paper by the lab headed by Raúl Méndez, ICREA professor at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona). The study describes a mechanism controlled by the CPEB1 protein that affects more than 200 genes related to cell proliferation ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Five major advances in anal and rectal cancer treatment with radiotherapy
SCAI announces Srihari S. Naidu, MD, MSCAI, President for 2025–26
Turning point in stomach cancer: Early-stage diagnoses now more common
Anal cancer rates rising most among older, white and Hispanic women
Scientists fight Alzheimer’s by helping glial cells process glucose
Two-week radiotherapy proven as safe and effective as eight-week course for prostate cancer, after 10-year follow-up in phase III trial
Columbia University Fertility Center named #1 by Newsweek
Two prominent Boston Children's Hospital scientists elected to National Academy of Sciences
Vegetation changes accelerated climate shifts during the late Miocene, study finds
Scientists discover key to taming unrest at Italy’s Campi Flegrei
Study reveals details of process driving evolution and major diseases
NCSA director Bill Gropp honored with prestigious ACM award
The future of brain activity monitoring may look like a strand of hair
New gene-editing therapy shows early success in fighting advanced GI cancers
nTIDE May 2025 Jobs Report: Employment of People with Disabilities Remains in a Holding Pattern
SCAI honors members for outstanding service and dedication
NRG Oncology adds new committee leaders in lung cancer and imaging
Sun safety declining in Canada amid rise in skin cancer cases
Pennington Biomedical highlights how cellular quality control contribute to insulin resistance related to type 2 diabetes
ACM honors those who shape technology's future
ESE and ESPE joint event to call for stronger national and EU action on endocrine disruptors
Call for papers: Commemorative collection honoring Dr. Judith Campisi
New studies highlight potential of artificial intelligence to improve outcomes for patients with heart failure and cardiac arrest
Space junk falling to Earth needs to be tracked. Meteoroid sounds can help
Dust in the system — How Saharan storms threaten Europe’s solar power future
“It’s like they have a superpower”: Genetic analysis of all-women extreme divers finds changes linked to blood pressure, cold tolerance
The all-female Korean Haenyeo divers show genetic adaptions to cold water diving
Antivenom neutralizes the neurotoxins of 19 of the world’s deadliest snakes
Postpartum care differences in LGBTQ+ and non-LGBTQ+ individuals
Medicaid unwinding linked to disruptions in opioid addiction treatment
[Press-News.org] Extremely high estrogen levels may underlie complications of single-birth IVF pregnanciesFreezing embryos for later transfer when hormone levels were lower reduced undersize infants, eliminated preeclampsia in small study