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Reprod Biomed Online. 2020 Aug 01;:
Authors: Larsen MD, Jølving LR, Fedder J, Nørgård BM
Abstract
RESEARCH QUESTION: The question of interest for this study was to examine the chance of a live birth following assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatment in women with epilepsy compared with women without epilepsy. In sub-analyses, the chance of biochemical and clinical pregnancies, and the impact of antiepileptic drugs (AED) treatment prior to embryo transfer, was analysed.
DESIGN: This register-based cohort study was based on the Danish ART register comprising all women who underwent embryo transfer during 2006 to 2017, which included 730 ART treatments in 264 women with a history of epilepsy, and 128,387 ART treatments in 42,938 women without epilepsy. Adjustments were made for comorbidity, women's age, calendar year, type of infertility treatment and cause of infertility. A possible impact of AED use at the time of embryo transfer was studied in a sub-analysis. The primary outcome was live birth within a period of 140-308 days after the date of embryo transfer.
RESULTS: The adjusted odds ratio for a live birth per embryo transfer in women with epilepsy, relative to women without epilepsy, was 1.06 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.88-1.28). The adjusted odds ratio for a live birth among users of an AED was 1.22 (95% CI 0.77-1.92) relative to women who had stopped the use of AED prior to embryo transfer.
CONCLUSIONS: The chances of a live birth per embryo transfer were similar in women with and without epilepsy. These are novel and reassuring findings on the efficacy of infertility treatment in women with epilepsy.
PMID: 32978071 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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