The prevalence of congenital heart disease (CHD) among in vitro fertilisation (IVF) pregnancies was similar to that of the general population, but there is an increasing risk of CHD among twins resulting from IVF, according to research by Yale School of Medicine researchers.
Mert Ozan Bahtiyar, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, will present the abstract on 31 January at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine Annual Meeting in Dallas, Texas.
Working with the Fetal Cardiovascular Centre at Yale University and Yale-New Haven Hospital, a central referral centre for the State of Connecticut, Bahtiyar and his colleagues examined almost 2,000 patients using foetal echocardiography. The study lasted from 1 January 2006 through 31 July 2007. Among those patients, 250 women were specifically seen due to pregnancy resulting from in vitro fertilisation. They did not have other medical problems that would require echocardiograms. The team conducted 357 foetal echocardiograms for 347 foetuses on these 250 women. Approximately 30 percent had twin pregnancies.
'We found that twin pregnancies conceived through IVF have a higher prevalence of CHD than singletons,' said Bahtiyar, who saw a three-fold increase. 'IVF twins are usually fraternal, but past studies of identical twins also showed up to a 13-fold increase in congenital heart defects.'
Bahtiyar said that previous reports of increased CHD risk in pregnancies conceived via IVF may be due, in part, to a higher frequency of multiple pregnancies resulting from this form of conception. 'The increased twinning seems to be the cause of the abnormality and not IVF per se.'
Bahtiyar and his team plan to increase the number of study subjects to replicate these preliminary results.
'The next step is to explore why this is happening,' he said. 'Knowing about the risk of these defects will help increase the likelihood of survival after birth.'
Other authors on the study included Antonette T. Dulay, Bevin P. Weeks, Alan H. Friedman and Joshua A. Copel.
'Whose turn to pay?' can be deal-breaker for cohabiting couplesCouples living together face dozens of spending decisions every week. Should we eat out tonight? Whose turn to pay? Should we hire a lawnmower or a house cleaner, or skip both to pay... — full story
OSU to study air pollutant's impact on Chinese, U.S. healthScientists at Oregon State University and China's Peking University plan to use part of a $12.4 million grant to study the impact that the burning of fuels like coal and biomass - as... — full story
Cardiac patients trial home-based rehabilitationPatients who have been treated in hospital for cardiac health problems, such as a heart attack, are being given a powerful new option to help set them on the path to good health. CSIRO's... — full story
Health undervalued in reproductive rights debateWomen's health is increasingly undervalued in conflicts over reproductive rights, including clashes based on moral objections under so-called conscience clauses, a new study by a University... — full story