When is Assisted Hatching Recommended
March 21st, 2010, Posted in InformationThe most common reason for an IVF treatment to fail is because the embryos don’t implant: either because the embryos have failed to progress or due to a failure to hatch. Assisted hatching is one procedure that aims to reduce the number of embryos which don’t hatch (either because their protective layer is too thick, or the embryo doesn’t have enough energy to break out).
Assisted Hatching was first carried out in the 1990s. It is performed in order to help an embryo hatch out of its protective protein coat and implant into the uterus. The coat surrounds the embryos and helps to regulate fertilisation by preventing more than one sperm from penetrating the egg. It also acts as protection during the early stages of development.
Research has shown that assisted hatching is only beneficial for certain groups of patients. Studies have shown that where it is carried out after fertility treatment for all groups of patients it doesn’t increase the chances of success. However, when the patient is selected on specific criteria it can produce a considerable improvement in success rates.
The first group for whom assisted hatching IVF is recommended is women over the age of 37. This is because as a woman ages, so do her eggs resulting in a thickening and hardening of the protective layer. This is part of the reason why the IVF process becomes less successful as women age. For this reason assisted hatching is particularly useful for older women and those whose embryos are known to have a particularly thick zona pellicuda.
The second group is those who have suffered repeated failed infertility treatments. Though the exact causes of these failures is rarely known it has been shown that the procedure can significantly improve the chances of success for these women.
The final group is women who are found to have an elevated FSH (follicle stimulating hormone) on day 3 of their monthly cycle. You would hope that FSH levels would be less than 15 mIU/mL on day 3 but if they are above this then it is an indicator of a failing ovarian reserve. This happens as a woman approaches the menopause. Having a high FSH when you are quite young is a sign that your eggs are prematurely aging, which could be the cause of your IVF failure as, just like older women, the protective layer is beginning to thicken.