Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Research Question:
In women undergoing frozen embryo transfer, does routine endometrial injury before frozen embryo transfer increase clinical pregnancy rate?
Research Hypothesis:
(Null Hypothesis) In women undergoing frozen embryo transfer Routine endometrial injury before frozen embryo transfer does not increase clinical pregnancy rate.
(Alternative Hypothesis) In women undergoing frozen embryo transfer, endometrial injury before the transfer may increase pregnancy rate.
Full description
Suitable women will be invited to participate in the study then a signed and informed consent will be obtained from them. When the patient's consent is obtained, they are to be included into the study.
Data Collection:
During first visit, all patients will undergo complete clinical examination and detailed medical history will be obtained. Each patient will have a Case Record Form (CRF) in which the following data will be recorded.
Procedure:
Endometrial injury:
A single induced injury will be done on the posterior endometrium on day 7 of the transfer cycle by using modified Cook catheter Protocol for vitrification Embryos will first loaded with equilibrium solution containing7.5% ethylene glycol (EG) and 7.5% dimethyl sulphoxide (DSMO) (Sigma-Aldrich) for 5-10 minute at room temperature and then with vitrification solution containing 15% EG, 15% DSMO and 0.5 mol/L sucrose for 50-60 seconds at room temperature. After observed cellular shrinkage, embryos will quickly stored in liquid nitrogen (LN) for at least 2 months. At warming, embryos will removed from LN and embryos will exposed to thawing solution containing sucrose at 37°C temperature for 50-60 seconds and then embryos will sequentially incubated in diluents solutions before being transferred .
Evaluation and transfer of thawed embryos After thawing, each embryo will evaluated twice, once immediately for the number of surviving blastomeres and again after 18 hours post-thaw in vitro culture for assessing of mitosis and number of blastomeres. Embryos will considered survived if >50% of each blastomere are intact and selected for intrauterine transfer (Depending on patients' embryos, 2 or 3 embryos will transferred).
Embryos will classified as fully intact or excellent morphology (100% cells survived with <10% fragmentation) or good morphology (100% cells survived with 10%-20% fragmentation), partially damaged or poor morphology (≥50% cells survived with or without any fragmentation) and Degenerated embryos (<50% cells survived) .Only fully intact and partially damaged embryos will transferred. Degenerated or arrested embryos will not transferred.
Protocol of endometrial preparation before Frozen Embryo Transfer (FET) :
There are different protocols for FET cycles. That is true for both "natural cycle" FETs and for "hormone replacement cycle" frozen-thawed embryo transfers. We will use hormone replacement cycles because they have better success rates. However, some clinics offer a natural cycle FET approach. Success rates are higher with hormone replacement, or "controlled" FET cycles.
Medicines and Drugs in a Frozen Embryo Transfer FET Cycle
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Yasser Sherbiny, invistgator
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal