Fertility and Sterility
Volume 88, Issue 6 , Pages 1554-1561, December 2007

The relative contribution of assisted reproductive technologies and ovulation induction to multiple births in the United States 5 years after the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology/American Society for Reproductive Medicine recommendation to limit the number of embryos transferred

  • Richard P. Dickey, M.D., Ph.D.

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Richard P. Dickey, M.D., Ph.D., The Fertility Institute of New Orleans, 800 N. Causeway Boulevard., Suite 2C, Mandeville, Louisiana, 70448 (FAX: 985-892-9245).

Section of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Louisiana State University School of Medicine, New Orleans; the Fertility Institute of New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana

Received 29 December 2005; received in revised form 22 January 2007; accepted 22 January 2007. published online 04 May 2007.

Objective

To examine the effect of the 1998 Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology/American Society for Reproductive Medicine (SART/ASRM) Practice Committee recommendation to limit the number of embryos transferred on high order multiple births (HOMB) due to assisted reproduction technology (ART) and ovulation induction (OI) in the United States.

Setting

None.

Design

Analysis of U.S. natality files, and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and ASRM/SART registry reports.

Setting

None.

Patient(s)

None.

Intervention(s)

None.

Main Outcome Measure(s)

Number and ratio of twin, triplet, and quadruplet or higher order (quadruplet/+) multiple births. Percentage of HOMB due to ART, OI, natural conception, and unexplained.

Result(s)

Between 1998 and 2003, the number of twin births (number of live-born infants in twin deliveries) in the United States increased 17%, and the number of HOMB was unchanged. Since 1998, total births due to ART increased 67%, twin births increased 65%, triplet births deceased 8%, and quadruplet/+ births decreased 35%. The ratio of twin, triplet, and quadruplet/+ births to total ART births decreased 2%, 45%, and 61% respectively. In 2003, the estimated percentages of multiple births due to ART and OI were twins 16% and 21%, triplets 45% and 37%, and quadruplets/+ 30% and 62%, respectively.

Conclusion(s)

Following publication of the SART/ASRM recommended limits on number of embryos transferred, the ratio of HOMB births to total ART births decreased substantially; however, U.S. HOMB did not decrease due to a 67% increase in total ART births and an increase in triplet births from OI.

Key Words: SART/ASRM, CDC, high order multiple birth, IVF, ovulation induction, practice committee, quadruplet, triplet, twin, United States

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PII: S0015-0282(07)00246-4

doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2007.01.112

Fertility and Sterility
Volume 88, Issue 6 , Pages 1554-1561, December 2007