scholarly journals COMPARING TRENDS IN ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE THERAPY RELATED MULTI-FETAL GESTATION RATES FROM 2014-2019 BETWEEN AUTOLOGOUS AND DONOR EGG CYCLES

2021 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. e255
Author(s):  
Hanna Kim ◽  
Kevin J. Doody ◽  
Kathleen M. Doody
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Inmaculada Jurado Garcia ◽  
Jonas Sarasa ◽  
Cristina Real Llinares ◽  
Blanca Rodriguez-Estrada ◽  
Ismael Vilella Amorós ◽  
...  
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2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (12) ◽  
pp. 1661-1665 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis K. Masbou ◽  
Jenna B. Friedenthal ◽  
David H. McCulloh ◽  
Caroline McCaffrey ◽  
M. Elizabeth Fino ◽  
...  

Two of the many milestone developments in the field of assisted reproduction have been oocyte donation and preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy (PGT-A). Because it has been demonstrated that even young women produce a meaningful proportion of aneuploid embryos, screening out such abnormalities could potentially increase the efficacy of donor egg (DE) cycles. In this retrospective cohort study, we investigated the effect of PGT-A on DE cycle outcomes, including implantation rate (IR), spontaneous abortion rate (SABR), and ongoing pregnancy/live birth rate. We used fresh and frozen donor cycles not using PGT-A as comparison groups; all cases involved single embryo transfer. Data analysis revealed that PGT-A did not improve pregnancy outcome metrics in DE cycles, although there was a trend toward decreasing the SABR. There was a significant increase in IR with fresh cycles outperforming all frozen cycles. Overall, these results suggest that the benefits of performing PGT-A on embryos derived from young DEs may be limited and that there is an effect of the freezing process on pregnancy outcomes. These findings may provide useful insights into the science and practice of PGT-A across all of its applications.


2005 ◽  
Vol 84 ◽  
pp. S334 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.G. Kearns ◽  
R. Pen ◽  
J. Kaminsky ◽  
K.S. Richter ◽  
P. Browne

Author(s):  
Tanya Kant ◽  
Elizabeth Reed

Using textual analysis of 28 adverts for egg donation, sharing, and freezing drawn from Facebook’s Ad Library archive, we consider what forms of motherhood, kinship, and sociality are promised through targeted advertisements for Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ARTs) on Facebook. We seek to understand (1) how egg donation, sharing and freezing adverts by ART providers represent the women they expect to use their services; (2) how the meaning of these representations is changed by their delivery through algorithmically targeted marketing; and (3) what imaginative, genealogical, and relational possibilities are foreclosed or endorsed in the delivery of these adverts to algorithmically anticipated “fertile females”. Through textual analysis we seek to understand the forms of potential “life” that are present in the advertisements. We consider the representations of egg donation, identify a banal ambiguity in promised post-feminist kinship, and identify the selected families-in-making which might be created by ART. We combine this with a critical interrogation of how and why these adverts are targeted and delivered to certain demographics of algorithmically anticipated Facebook users. The opacity and structural rigidity of Facebook’s targeted advertising systems – structural mechanisms that are binaric in back-end databases and yet “lively” at the point of the user interface - require that we interrogate both media text and computational delivery mechanisms to meaningfully understand what forms of “life” are promised by gender-targeted ART. The genealogical possibility offered through ART is represented with banal ambiguity wherein potentially disruptive arrangements of kinship are derisked by an overarching narrative of simplicity and sameness.


Author(s):  
Daisy Deomampo

Chapter 3 analyzes constructions of skin color and race in intended parents’ narratives about the experience of selecting an egg donor. This chapter shows how egg donors of different backgrounds are differently valued, bolstering social hierarchies. At the same time, the chapter describes the diversity of ways that intended parents approach race and skin tone when choosing an egg donor. In contrast to dominant assumptions that intended parents seek donors who match their own ethnic backgrounds in order to reproduce whiteness, the process of egg donation represented an opportunity for many intended parents to subvert racial hierarchies by selecting Indian donors with darker skin tones. The chapter argues that such narratives, however, misrecognize donor egg selection as an opening to challenge racial hierarchies; instead, such decisions rely on essentialized notions of race and beauty that exoticize Indian women and reflect new articulations of biological race.


Author(s):  
Gautam Allahbadia ◽  
Kaushal Kadam ◽  
Goral Gandhi
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