doi:10.1007/s10815-021-02390-z...
Springer
Medicine & Public Health
2022
31-03-2022
Purpose This study aims to examine whether blastocyst morphology post-warming correlates with live birth.
Methods In this cohort study, morphological characteristics post-warming were reviewed in all single vitrified-warmed blastocyst transfer cycles performed between November 2016 and May 2017.
Immediately before transfer, the degree of blastocoel re-expansion was graded as A, fully expanded; B, partially expanded ≥ 50%; C, partially expanded < 50%; and D, collapsed.
The degree of post-warming cell survival was graded on a scale of 50 to 100% and was then classified into 4 groups: very low 50–70%, low 71–80%, moderate 81–90%, and high 91–100%.
Results Overall, 612 cycles were reviewed, of which 196 included PGT-A tested embryos.
The live birth rate (LBR) increased from 11.4% in the collapsed blastocysts group to 38.9% in the post-warming full re-expansion group ( p < 0.001) and from 6.5% for blastocysts with a very low cell survival rate to 34.7% for blastocysts with high cell survival rate ( p = 0.001).
LBR was 6.7% for blastocysts with the worst post-warming morphological characteristics, namely, collapsed with very low cell survival rate.
On multivariate analyses, partial blastocyst re-expansion ≥ 50%, full re-expansion, and high cell survival rate remained significantly associated with live birth, after controlling for female age, pre-vitrification morphological grading, and PGT-A.
A sub-analysis of cycles using PGT-A tested embryos showed similar results.
Conclusion Post-warming re-expansion and high cell survival rate are associated with higher LBR in euploid and untested blastocysts.
However, embryos with poor post-warming morphology still demonstrate a considerable probability of live birth, and they should not be discarded.
Allen, Meagan,Hale, Lyndon,Lantsberg, Daniel,Kieu, Violet,Stevens, John,Stern, Catharyn,Gardner, David K.,Mizrachi, Yossi, 2022, Post-warming embryo morphology is associated with live birth: a cohort study of single vitrified-warmed blastocyst transfer cycles, Springer