Journal: Reproductive BioMedicine Online
Are major defects in children conceived in vitro due to innate problems in patients or to induced genetic damage?
Received 24 March 2003, Accepted 2 May 2003, Published online 25 July 2003
Abstract Full Text Full-Text PDF (735 KB)
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Recent epidemiological analyses
- Epidemiological risks of imprinting, imprinting syndromes and rare disease after ART
- Other genetic and developmental risks influencing epidemiological analyses
- Summary
- References
- Authors and footnotes
- Figures and tables
Abstract
Birth anomalies recently detected in epidemiological studies indicate greater risks following assisted human reproduction than with natural conception. Some of these conclusions and assumptions are questioned in this paper, and the effects of specific causative factors unique to some infertile couples are analysed. Other recent studies have identified imprinting defects as causes of birth disorders following IVF or intracytoplasmic sperm injection. While few in numbers, they apparently involve unusual factors in conception such as aberrant responses among preimplantation embryos to culture medium or serum. Various genetic and developmental factors in infertile couples influencing the origin of such birth outcomes are assessed, and the significance of imprinting and its embryological roles are discussed.
Keywords: assisted human conception, birth anomalies, ICSI, imprinting syndromes, IVF.

