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TECHNOLOGICAL CONCEPTION
ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY SURVEILLANCE -- UNITED STATES, 2005. Assisted reproductive technology (ART) includes fertility treatments in which both eggs and sperm are handled in the laboratory (i.e., in vitro fertilization and related procedures).
Patients who undergo ART procedures are more likely to deliver multiple-birth infants than women who conceive naturally. Multiple births are associated with increased risk for mothers and infants (e.g., pregnancy complications, premature delivery, low-birthweight infants, and long-term disability among infants). This report presents the most recent national data and state-specific results.
Reporting Period Covered: 2005.
Description of System: In 1996, CDC initiated data collection regarding ART procedures performed in the United States, as mandated by the Fertility Clinic Success Rate and Certification Act of 1992 (FCSRCA) (Public Law 102-493 [October 24, 1992]). Beginning with 2004, CDC has contracted with a statistical survey research organization, Westat, Inc., to obtain data from ART medical centers in the United States. Westat, Inc., maintains CDC's web-based data collection system called the National ART Surveillance System (NASS).
Results: In 2005, a total of 134,260 ART procedures were reported to CDC. These procedures resulted in 38,910 live-birth deliveries and 52,041 infants. Nationwide, 73% of ART procedures used freshly fertilized embryos from the patient's eggs, 15% used thawed embryos from the patient's eggs, 8% used freshly fertilized embryos from donor eggs, and 4% used thawed embryos from donor eggs.
Overall, 42% of ART transfer
procedures resulted in a pregnancy, and 35% resulted in a live-birth
delivery (delivery of one or more live-born infants). The highest
live-birth rates were observed among ART procedures that used freshly
fertilized embryos from donor eggs (52%).
The highest numbers of ART
procedures were performed among residents of California (18,655), New
York (12,032), Illinois (9,449), New Jersey (9,325), and Massachusetts
(8,571). These five states also reported the highest number of
live-birth deliveries. Of 52,041 infants born through ART, 49% were
born in multiple-birth deliveries.
The multiple-birth risk was highest
for women who underwent ART transfer procedures that used freshly
fertilized embryos from either donor eggs (41%) or their own eggs
(32%).
Approximately 1% of U.S. infants born in 2005 were conceived
through ART. Those infants accounted for 17% of multiple births
nationwide.
Approximately 9% of ART singletons, 57% of ART twins, and
95% of ART triplets or higher-order multiples were low birthweight.
Similarly, 15% of ART singletons, 66% of ART twins, and 97% of ART
triplets or higher-order multiples were born preterm.
Interpretation: Whether an ART procedure resulted in a pregnancy and
live-birth delivery varied according to different patient and treatment
factors. ART poses a major risk for multiple births that are associated
with adverse maternal and infant outcomes (e.g., preterm delivery, low
birthweight, and infant mortality). This risk varied according to the
patient's age, the type of ART procedure performed, the number of
embryos available for transfer to the uterus, the number actually
transferred, and the day of transfer (day 3 or day 5).
Public Health Actions: ART-related multiple births represent a sizable
proportion of all multiple births nationwide and in selected states. To
minimize the adverse maternal and child health effects that are
associated with multiple pregnancies, ongoing efforts to limit the
number of embryos transferred in each ART procedure should be continued
and strengthened.
Adverse maternal and infant outcomes (e.g., low
birthweight and preterm delivery) associated with ART treatment choices
should be explained fully when counseling patients who are considering
ART.
Of 475 medical centers in the United States and surrounding territories
that performed ART procedures in 2005, a total of 422 (90%) provided
data to CDC (Figure 1). The majority of medical centers that performed
ART procedures were in the eastern United States, in or near major
cities.
The number
of medical centers performing ART procedures varied by state. The
states with the largest number of ART medical centers reporting data
for 2005 were California (59), New York (33), Florida (29), Illinois
(29), and Texas (29). Four states (Alaska, Maine, Montana, and Wyoming)
and three U.S. territories (Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia,
and the U.S. Virgin Islands) had no ART medical centers.
[20June08, Surveillance Summaries 57(SS05);1-23, Assisted Reproductive Technology Surveillance --- United States, 2005 -- http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss5705a1.htm?s_cid=ss5705a1_e]
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