The purpose of this study is to determine the best way to freeze eggs in order to preserve the fertility potential of young women.
Human egg freezing is rapidly becoming a vital tool in Assisted Reproductive Technology. Candidates for egg freezing include women without partners who wish to preserve their fertility; cancer patients at risk of losing fertility from chemotherapy; and donor egg recipients. While in the past, egg freezing has not been as successful as embryo freezing in producing live births, recent experience in several centers has demonstrated significant improvement, with pregnancy rates comparable to those achieved with frozen embryos. The purpose of this study is to determine the best method to freeze eggs. We shall be seeking volunteers from the egg donor program, since young, fertile donors represent the best model to study the effect of egg freezing. We plan to enroll 12 recipients and 6 donors in this study. Each egg donor will go through a stringent screening process (medical, genetic and psychological). Eggs retrieved from all donors will be split in half: one half will be frozen by the slow freeze method, and the other half by vitrification. Each of the six donors will be paired with two recipients; each recipient will be assigned half the total eggs frozen. For each recipient, half of the eggs will come from the slow freeze group and the other half will come from vitrification. When the recipient's uterine lining is deemed ready (following estrogen treatment and ultrasound monitoring), thawing will be performed on eggs frozen by either the slow freeze or the vitrification method. The thaw process will be randomized between the two types of freezing. One sperm will be injected into each egg that survived the freeze. Fertilization and embryo development will be recorded. Ideally, two embryos will be transferred into the recipient's uterus. Pregnancy will be determined by a blood test and followed by serial blood tests and ultrasound. The study will determine which freezing method yields better survival and pregnancy rates.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
18
retrieved oocytes from the donor will be split in half and frozen by both existing egg freezing methods: slow freezing and vitrification. The recipients will then be randomized as to which group of eggs will be thawed out for their first attempt at achieving a pregnancy.
North Shore University Hospital
Manhasset, New York, United States
Achievement of a pregnancy, as determined by a fetal heartbeat
Time frame: 2 months
Percentage of eggs that result in blastocyst formation
Time frame: 1 week
Oocyte survival (the percentage of eggs that survive the freeze-thaw procedure)
Time frame: 2 days
ICSI fertilization rate (percentage of eggs that fertilize)
Time frame: 2 days
Incidence rate of embryo formation (percentage of embryos formed/number of eggs fertilized)
Time frame: 2 days
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