• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Breakthrough Embryo Test Could Improve The Odds For Thousands Undergoing IVF

January 12, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A new, noninvasive test to check the quality of embryos could make a huge difference to people undergoing fertility treatment. Right now, one of the big barriers to success in in-vitro fertilization (IVF) is that it’s difficult to know the best embryos to choose, but this new test could make that much easier.

“Unfortunately, IVF success still involves a big element of chance, but that’s something we’re hoping our research can change,” said co-senior author H. Irene Su of UC San Diego in a statement. This optimism will be welcomed by the thousands who seek IVF treatment each year, just a fraction of the estimated one in six people affected by infertility worldwide.

Advertisement

Since the birth of the world’s first IVF baby Louise Brown, back in 1978 in the UK, reproductive medicine has made great strides. But undertaking a course of IVF can be a long and arduous process for families, especially when you consider that the overall live birth rate for females under the age of 40 in the US is only 20-40 percent.

Doctors are under pressure to select the lab-grown embryos that have the best chance of resulting in a healthy pregnancy for each patient, but this is no easy task.

“Right now, the best way we have to predict embryo outcome involves looking at embryos and measuring morphological characteristics or taking some cells from the embryo to look at genetic makeup, both of which have limitations,” Su explained.

The team wanted to look at things a different way. The new method doesn’t examine the embryos themselves, but uses the leftover liquid medium that was used to grow them. It doesn’t involve any extra steps and doesn’t interfere with the IVF process, something that was very important to the researchers.

Advertisement

While cells are growing, they release small molecules of RNA, called exRNAs. These were only discovered within the last couple of decades, and scientists still aren’t sure of their exact function.

“It’s really only in the last decade that we have started to uncover the uses for exRNAs, and there could be countless other applications we haven’t yet discovered,” said co-senior author Sheng Zhong.

The team took samples of growth medium from embryos at five different stages to gather information about the profile of exRNAs they release as they develop. Around 4,000 of these molecules were identified at each stage. By inputting this data into a machine-learning model, it was possible to predict an embryo’s growth trajectory based on the exRNAs it produced.

The model’s predictions were found to match up with the tests that are currently used to check for embryo quality, suggesting this noninvasive method could potentially be used to weed out the embryos with the most likely chances of success.

Advertisement

The authors caution that it will be some time before any new method can be used in a clinical setting. “We have data connecting healthy morphology to positive IVF outcomes, and now we’ve seen that exRNAs can be used to predict good morphology, but we still need to draw that final line before our test will be ready for primetime,” said Su.

But it’s a promising start, and an innovative way of addressing an old problem.

As Su put it, rather than targeting the embryos directly, “What we’ve done is more akin to looking at what’s left behind at an archeological site to help us learn more about who lived there and what they did.”

The study is published in Cell Genomics.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Factbox-Possible candidates to become Japan’s next prime minister
  2. Submarine dispute has EU chair asking: Is America back?
  3. Indonesia’s new carbon tax signals higher power costs amid calls for clarity
  4. Decades-Old, Infinitely Large Math Problem Gets Surprisingly Neat Solution

Source Link: Breakthrough Embryo Test Could Improve The Odds For Thousands Undergoing IVF

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • What Is Cryptozoology? We Explore The History And Mystery Of This Controversial Field
  • The Universe’s “Red Sky Paradox” Just Got Darker: Most Stars Might Never Host Observers
  • Uranus And Neptune May Not Be “Ice Giants” But The Solar System’s First “Rocky Giants”
  • COVID-19 Can Alter Sperm And Affect Brain Development In Offspring, Causing Anxious Behavior
  • Why Do Spiders’ Legs Curl Up Like That When They’re Dead?
  • “Dead Men’s Fingers” Might Just Be The Strangest Fruit On The Planet
  • The South Atlantic’s Giant Weak Spot In The Earth’s Magnetic Field Is Growing
  • Nearly Half A Century After Being Lost, “Zombie Satellite” LES-1 Began Sending Signals To Earth
  • Extinct In the Wild, An Incredibly Rare Spix’s Macaw Chick Hatches In New Hope For Species
  • HUNTR/X Or Giant Squid? Following Alien Claims, We Asked Scientists What They Would Like Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS To Be
  • Flat-Earthers Proved Wrong Using A Security Camera And A Garage
  • Earth Breaches Its First Climate Tipping Point: We’re Moving Into A World Without Coral Reefs
  • Cheese Caves, A Proposal, And Chance: How Scientists Ended Up Watching Fungi Evolve In Real Time
  • Lab-Grown 3D Embryo Models Make Their Own Blood In Regenerative Medicine Breakthrough
  • Humans’ Hidden “Sixth Sense” To Be Mapped Following $14.2 Million Prize – What Is Interoception?
  • Purple Earth Hypothesis: Our Planet Was Not Blue And Green Over 2.4 Billion Years Ago
  • Hippos Hung Around In Europe 80,000 Years Later Than We Thought
  • Officially Gone: Slender-Billed Curlew, Once-Widespread Migratory Bird, Declared Extinct By IUCN
  • Watch: Rare Footage Captures Freaky Faceless Cusk Eels Lurking On The Deep-Sea Floor
  • Watch This Funky Sea Pig Dancing Its Way Through The Deep Sea, Over 2,300 Meters Below The Surface
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version