New IVF calculator is best way yet to predict fertility success
WILL IVF work for you? A new calculator could give you the
most accurate prediction yet of your chances of success in fertility hospital in chennai.
Fertility doctors tend to base a woman’s odds of IVF success
on her age and ovarian reserve – the number of follicles available for
fertilisation. With this information they can decide whether or not to
recommend treatment – which can be expensive, as well as mentally and
physically demanding.
But existing models for predicting the outcome of IVF are
based on limited, outdated information, says Rima Dhillon at the University of
Birmingham, UK. IVF techniques have changed considerably since these models were
developed – embryos are grown outside the body for longer, for example.
Meanwhile, a decade of research has highlighted many new factors that can
affect the outcome, including a woman’s weight, any previous pregnancies or
miscarriages she might have had, the cause of infertility and how long a woman
had been trying for a baby. Ethnicity also seems to play a role, although no
one is sure why that should be.
To create a model that encompassed all these factors,
Dhillon and her colleagues combed through data from almost 10,000 women who had
their first round of IVF between 2008 and 2012. The data was taken from a
UK-wide chain of fertility clinics, in which a quarter of women had their
treatment covered by the NHS, while three-quarters paid privately. IVF was
considered a success if a baby was healthy one month after birth.
The team then tested their model’s ability to predict the
IVF outcomes of women who had attended the fertility clinics between 2012 and
2013 and found that it was correct 65 per cent of the time (Human Reproduction,
doi.org/8t7).
It’s not clear how accurate current predictions are. For
example, a 32-year-old may be told that women her age have a 33 per cent chance
of IVF success on average, but should she have any additional problems, such as
a history of miscarriage, it is up to the doctor to make a “best guess” at
predicting how this will affect her chances.
Older models do need to be updated, says Roger Sturmey at
Hull York Medical School in the UK. “IVF is no easy choice, so couples really
should be given the best, most accurate information available,” he says.
The new model is only based on women who are about to start
their first cycle of IVF(ivf clinics in chennai)
using fresh embryos. Such women are given hormone treatments to stimulate the
production of eggs, which are then removed and fertilised with sperm in a lab.
A healthy-looking embryo can then be implanted.

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