New IVF Technique Is THREE TIMES More Successful

New IVF Technique Is THREE TIMES More Successful

A new IVF technique which trebles a woman's chance of having a baby has been developed by scientists.

It could help spare thousands of couples the heartache of miscarriage as well as remove the risk that children conceived by fertility treatment have of conditions such as Down's syndrome.

The new procedure involves taking a sample from embryos when they are five days old and checking each of its 23 pairs of chromosomes. Only the healthiest single embryo is implanted in the womb.

Developed by American researchers, Chromosome Aneuploidy Screening has been so successful that experts believe it will be routinely available to women undergoing IVF in private clinics or on the NHS within the next three years.

Trials have shown that up to 88 per cent of women receiving tested embryos give birth, more than treble the success rate of IVF – only between 20 and 30 per cent of those undergoing treatment in Britain will have a baby.

The test, which was unveiled at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine conference in Denver, Colorado, costs £2,000 a time, on top of the normal price of IVF of around £4,000.

But its success rate means that couples paying for private treatment would potentially save thousands of pounds as they would probably need only one cycle.

It would also cut millions from the NHS's fertility treatment bill. Couples are normally offered up to three free cycles of IVF at a total cost to the health service of £12,000.

Last year British scientists unveiled a similar screening technique that also used chromosome screening to select only the healthiest embryos for IVF.

But this latest method is at a far more advanced stage and has been subject to rigorous testing, unlike the British technique.

Normally during IVF, up to 24 eggs are taken from a woman's ovaries to be fertilised with her partner's sperm. Doctors then look at the shape and size of the embryos and choose what they think are the healthiest ones to be implanted.

But experts say this current method is very unreliable at picking up faulty embryos.

In addition, many IVF clinics will implant two or three embryos to try and boost a woman's chances of having a baby. Often more than one will develop into a foetus meaning she will have twins or triplets, which involves extra risks to the babies.

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