6533b826fe1ef96bd1283da5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Combination of metabolism measurement and a time-lapse system provides an embryo selection method based on oxygen uptake and chronology of cytokinesis timing.

Damià CastellóJosé RemohíMarcos MeseguerAntonio PellicerJose Maria De Los SantosA. Tejera

subject

0301 basic medicineAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyanimal structuresTime FactorsAdolescentPregnancy RateCell SurvivalTransducersVideo RecordingBiologyTime-Lapse ImagingAndrologyEmbryo Culture Techniques03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinePredictive Value of TestsPregnancymedicineHumansEmbryo ImplantationProspective StudiesSperm Injections IntracytoplasmicCytokinesis030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineMiniaturizationEmbryogenesisObstetrics and GynecologyEmbryoMetabolismEquipment DesignEmbryo TransferEmbryo MammalianEmbryo transferSurgeryOxygenPregnancy rate030104 developmental biologyTreatment OutcomeReproductive Medicineembryonic structuresFemaleSelection methodEnergy MetabolismEmbryo qualityCytokinesis

description

Objective To evaluate correlations between oxygen consumption (OC) measurements before and after embryo cytokinesis, observing OC during embryo cleavages and combining that information with morphokinetics to relate to implantation potential. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting University-affiliated private IVF unit. Patient(s) A total of 1,150 injected oocytes in 86 first oocyte donation cycles with embryo transfer on day 3. Intervention(s) None. Main Outcome Measurement(s) We analyzed the embryo OC and combined this data with the cytokinesis event, exact timing (in hours) of blastomeric cleavages, with the use of an incubator equipped with time-lapse videography, gathering a total of 7,630 measurements during the cytokinesis (active phase) and consecutive measurements after this division (passive phase), correlating this data with embryo outcome. Result(s) OC was found to increase during embryo cleavage, showing high levels during first division with a strong correlation with implantation success. Moreover, those embryos with slow or fast development gave rise to lower OC levels, whereas higher levels were associated with optimal embryo division ranges linked to higher implantation potential. Conclusion(s) A detailed analysis of OC by time-lapse observations enhances the value that these measurements represented as markers of embryo quality, especially during the cytokinesis events produced during preimplantation development.

10.1016/j.fertnstert.2016.03.019https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27037460