AtlantiCare
en Español
 
AboutHealth ServicesHealth ConditionsLocationsEvents & CoursesCommunityWays of Giving
  Search  
 
Health News
Today's Headlines
Health Alerts
Health News Feature
Future of Medicine
Health Observances
Product Recalls
Health Library
Illnesses & Conditions
Drug Guide
FDA Drug Approvals
Medical Tests
Self-Help Resources
Complementary Medicine
Medline Search
Health Topics
Allergies
Asthma
Back Pain
Cancer
Caregiver
Depression
Diabetes
GERD
Heart
Kidney
Men's Health
Orthopedic
Parenting
Patient Safety
Pregnancy
Senior
Stress
Stroke
Weight Mgmt
Women's Health
Healthy Living
Fitness
Nutrition
Mind & Body
Family & Home
Health Animations
Human Atlas
Today's Headlines

Health News
Daily articles from HealthDay News: breaking news on health issues, drug approvals and recent discoveries.

Treatment Option Shortens Path to Pregnancy


Skipping one phase when treating infertility also cuts costs, study finds

FRIDAY, June 19 (HealthDay News) -- Among couples going to fertility clinics, pregnancy occurred more quickly -- and for less money -- when they took an accelerated route to in vitro fertilization, a new study has found.

The advantages came when the researchers eliminated one step in the fertility treatment -- the gonadotropin-stimulated intrauterine insemination cycle. Gonadotropin is a follicle-stimulating hormone.

Working with couples at Boston IVF and Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, the researchers divided 503 couples into two groups. Women in one group underwent conventional treatment -- three cycles of intrauterine insemination (IUI) using clomiphene citrate to stimulate ovulation, followed by three gonadotropin-stimulated IUI cycles, then up to six cycles of in vitro fertilization (IVF).

IUI is a procedure in which a thin, flexible catheter is threaded through the cervix and used to inject washed sperm directly into the uterus. In IVF, egg and sperm are joined outside the uterus in a petri dish, and the fertilized egg is then placed into the uterus.

Women in the other group went straight from the three clomiphene citrate-stimulated IUI cycles to the IVF cycles.

For women who skipped the gonadotropin-stimulated IUI cycle (also called FSH-stimulated cycle), the average time to pregnancy was eight months, compared with 11 months for those on the lengthier, conventional fertility-treatment program.

The study also found that the average delivery charges, based on insurance data, were $9,800 lower for those in the accelerated group and that couples saved, on average, $2,624, the study reported.

Women in the accelerated group were less likely to have multiple births, which helped lower the cost, according to the study.

Overall, 64 percent of the women, who ranged in age from 21 to 39, had a baby. That included 171 of 256 in the accelerated program and 150 of 247 in the lengthier program.

The study appears online June 16 in Fertility and Sterility.

"This is a very important study that will likely influence physicians to reduce the number of stimulated inseminations for patients with unexplained infertility," Elizabeth Ginsburg, president of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology, said in a news release from the group. "Adoption of such an accelerated course of treatment could result in many patients conceiving in less time with less expense."

More information

The American Pregnancy Association has more on in vitro fertilization.

SOURCE: American Society for Reproductive Medicine, news release, June 15, 2009
Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Health News Provided By:
HealthDay
 
 
Notice of Privacy Practices | Contact Us | Disclaimer    © 2009 AtlantiCare AtlantiCare Access
 

  Powered by HEALTHvision