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The goal of this clinical trial is to test the effect of modulated specialised immune cells isolated from the patients' own blood when administered to the uterus before embryo transfer on the IVF outcome (implantation, pregnancy and live birth rates).
To achieve this, blood will be obtained from eligible participants. Target cells will be isolated and incubated with the tested modulator for 24h, and returned to the uterine cavity 1 day prior to embryo transfer.
Researchers will compare the reproductive outcome of the tested intervention to that of a control group who will not receive the investigated cell treatment prior to embryo transfer.
Full description
Female patients with no known uterine pathologies scheduled to undergo embryo transfer will be identified through patient records and invited to participate in the study. Five days after luteinizing hormone (LH) surge, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) will be isolated from these patients' peripheral blood by density gradient centrifugation and suspended in culture medium. The obtained PBMC will be incubated with 500 IU/ml IFNt at 37˚C for 24 hours. This cell suspension will be carefully introduced in the uterine cavity by catheter on day 6 post LH surge. Embryo transfer will be performed the following day. A suitable age-matched control group will be recruited that will undergo embryo transfer but will not be administered immunomodulated PBMC prior to the transfer.
Reproductive outcomes in terms of rate of implantation, rate of clinical pregnancy and live birth rates will be recorded and compared between the two groups.
Data analysis will be performed by investigators blind to the patient group.
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300 participants in 2 patient groups
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Dimitar Parvanov, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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