Publication | Open Access
Co-culture with assisted hatching of human embryos using Buffalo rat liver cells
23
Citations
20
References
1998
Year
FertilityReproductive HealthGynecologyCell CultureReproductive BiologyAssisted HatchingEmbryologyEmbryo CultureRegenerative MedicinePublic HealthBuffalo Rat LiverInfertilityXenotransplantationEmbryo MediaHuman EmbryosMorphogenesisEmbryonic DevelopmentCell BiologyIn Vitro FertilizationHuman ReproductionMonolayer CultureBiologyAnimal ReproductionDevelopmental BiologyHuman Embryonic DevelopmentTissue CultureMedicineEmbryonic Stem Cell
Commercially obtained Buffalo rat liver (BRL) cells were grown in monolayer culture. The effect of BRL cell co-culture with assisted hatching on embryo development, implantation and pregnancy was investigated in a population of 200 'first-time' in-vitro fertilization (IVF) patients, subdivided into three groups according to the methods of fertilization [IVF; intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI); ICSI/IVF]. Assisted hatching was performed on all embryos chosen for transfer. Following co-culture, the overall embryo quality, implantation rate and pregnancy rates were not significantly different from the controls. However, when grouped according to fertilization method, co-culture was found to have an impact on pregnancy and implantation rates in the group undergoing conventional IVF. Using co-culture with assisted hatching, we were able to achieve a 58% (38/65) clinical pregnancy rate with a 49% (32/65) live birth rate and a 26% (60/235) implantation rate. No changes in the pregnancy and implantation rates were apparent in ICSI or ICSI/IVF subgroups. This is the first prospective, randomly controlled study which reports the use of BRL cell co-culture for human IVF for a large number of patients undergoing IVF for the first time.
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1990 | 382 | |
1989 | 272 | |
1980 | 173 | |
1994 | 162 | |
1990 | 121 | |
1989 | 117 | |
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