Journal Pre-proof Placental pathology in live births conceived with in vitro fertilization after fresh and frozen embryo transfer C.R. Sacha, A.L. Harris, K. James, K. Basnet, T.S. Freret, J. Yeh, A. Kaimal, I. Souter, D.J. Roberts PII:
S0002-9378(19)31213-X
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2019.09.047
Reference:
YMOB 12913
To appear in:
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Received Date: 28 June 2019 Revised Date:
20 September 2019
Accepted Date: 27 September 2019
Please cite this article as: Sacha C, Harris A, James K, Basnet K, Freret T, Yeh J, Kaimal A, Souter I, Roberts D, Placental pathology in live births conceived with in vitro fertilization after fresh and frozen embryo transfer, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (2019), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.ajog.2019.09.047. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Title: Placental pathology in live births conceived with in vitro fertilization after fresh and frozen
2
embryo transfer
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Sacha CR1*, Harris AL1, James K2, Basnet K3, Freret TS4, Yeh J1, Kaimal A5, Souter I1, Roberts DJ3
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1
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Outcomes Research, Department of OB/GYN, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
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School, Boston, MA; 3Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
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School, Boston, MA; 4Department of OB/GYN, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
Massachusetts General Hospital Fertility Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; 2Center for
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School, Boston, MA; 5Division of Maternal Fetal Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard
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Medical School, Boston, MA
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The authors report no conflicts of interest.
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Funding: none
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*Corresponding author:
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Caitlin R. Sacha, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Fertility Center Yawkey 10A 55 Fruit Street Boston, MA 02114 617-724-8868
[email protected]
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Word count: 6169
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Condensation: Frozen embryo transfer cycles may be associated with greater anatomic and vascular placental pathology than fresh embryo transfer cycles. Short Title: Placental pathology from fresh versus frozen embryos AJOG at a Glance: Applies to Original Research and Systematic Review submissions. This section is limited to no more than 130 words, 1-3 short sentences or phrases in bullet form • Given the rise in frozen embryo transfers, this study was performed to explore the differences in placental pathology in pregnancies arising from fresh versus frozen embryo transfers. • Compared to fresh embryo transfers, pregnancies arising from programmed frozen embryo transfers demonstrated more anatomic and vascular placental pathology. • This detailed placental pathology analysis of fresh versus frozen embryo transfers lays a foundation for understanding the basis of differences in obstetric risks between these two groups.
3 1
Abstract
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BACKGROUND: The availability and use of frozen embryos after ovarian hyperstimulation for assisted
3
reproduction has increased with improvement in vitrification techniques and the rise of pre-implantation
4
genetic testing. However, there is conflicting data regarding whether obstetric outcomes differ between
5
fresh and frozen embryo transfer cycles.
6
OBJECTIVE: To compare placental pathology from live births arising from fresh and frozen embryo
7
transfer cycles.
8
STUDY DESIGN: A cohort of 1140 live births with placental pathology arising from autologous in vitro
9
fertilization cycles with fresh or frozen programmed transfer performed at MGH Fertility Center between
10
2004 and 2017 was retrospectively reviewed. An experienced placental pathologist categorized the
11
reported placental pathology as anatomic, infectious, inflammatory, or vascular/thrombotic. Our primary
12
outcomes were differences in these placental pathologies between the two groups. Patient demographic,
13
cycle, and birth outcomes were compared with chi square tests, Student’s t-test, or nonparametric tests, as
14
appropriate. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to compare placental pathology between
15
the fresh and frozen transfer groups.
16
RESULTS: Of the 1140 cycles included in our analysis, 929 arose from fresh embryo transfers (81.3%)
17
and 211 arose from programmed frozen embryo transfers (18.5%). For both transfer types, the average
18
age of the women at time of treatment was 35 years; mean BMIs were within the normal range (23.6
19
kg/m2 for fresh transfers and 23.2 kg/m2 for frozen transfers, p = 0.26); and mean day 3 FSH was 7.1 and
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7.0 IU/L (p = 0.44), respectively. Deliveries occurred on average at 37.5 and 38.0 weeks gestational age
21
(p = 0.037) in the fresh vs. frozen transfer group, with similar rates of obstetric complications. However,
22
frozen transfers were more likely to be associated with marginal cord insertion [aOR 1.87 (CI 1.21, 2.91);
23
p = 0.01], accessory lobe formation [aOR 2.96 (CI 1.12, 7.79); p = 0.03], subchorionic thrombi [aOR 3.72
24
(CI 1.8, 7.71); p < 0.001], and fetal vascular malperfusion (FVM) characteristics with cord anomalies
25
[aOR 2.34 (CI 1.22, 4.46); p = 0.01]. These trends persisted when we analyzed day 5 transfers alone, and
4 1
single frozen embryo transfers remained associated with increased rates of subchorionic thrombi
2
compared to single fresh embryo transfers.
3
CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancies arising from frozen embryo transfers demonstrated more anatomic and
4
vascular placental pathology than those from fresh transfers in our cohort of patients, despite similar
5
maternal outcomes. More research is needed to explore how these differences in pathology may influence
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obstetric and perinatal outcomes.
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Key words: assisted reproduction, IVF, placenta, pathology, embryo, frozen transfer, fresh transfer
5 1 2
Introduction Freezing blastocysts after oocyte retrieval in in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles has increased
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greatly in recent years as a valuable tool to allow for pre-implantation genetic testing of blastocysts prior
4
to transfer, to reduce the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) in women with elevated peak
5
serum estradiol levels1, as well as to preserve additional (“supernumerary”) blastocysts available after
6
fresh embryo transfer. Some studies have shown that frozen embryo transfers (FETs) may have the
7
additional benefits of higher pregnancy rates and reduced adverse obstetric and perinatal outcomes, such
8
as preeclampsia or small-for-gestational-age (SGA) infants, potentially due to a more favorable uterine
9
environment.2-8 However, other data demonstrate greater risks of maternal and neonatal morbidities
10
associated with FETs.5,9-11 While higher clinical pregnancy rates and a lower incidence of OHSS were
11
reported in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) who undergo a FET, higher rates of LGA
12
and preeclampsia have also been demonstrated.12,13 A multicenter RCT by Wei et al. also showed that
13
single FETs may be associated with a higher risk of preeclampsia compared to single embryo fresh
14
transfers.14 Findings by Ernstad et al. suggest that programmed frozen cycles, performed using
15
supplemental progesterone and estrogen, may be associated with adverse outcomes such as postpartum
16
hemorrhage, macrosomia, and hypertensive disorders; natural and stimulated frozen cycles, in which
17
patients develop a corpus luteum that produces native progesterone, had similar outcomes in these
18
respects to fresh transfers in their study.15 It is thus clear from existing data that our knowledge of how
19
underlying maternal characteristics such as infertility diagnosis, uterine environment, and hormonal
20
milieu in the setting of a fresh vs. frozen transfer impact obstetric outcomes remains incomplete.
21
Because adverse obstetric outcomes such as hypertensive disorders and intrauterine growth
22
restriction are linked to abnormal placentation, understanding placentation in fresh versus frozen cycles is
23
a crucial step to understanding pregnancy complications associated with the different assisted
24
reproductive technology procedures.16-18 In this study, we aimed to assess the pathological profile of
25
placentas arising from fresh and programmed FETs to establish a foundation for understanding
26
differences in obstetric outcomes between these transfer cycle types.
6 1 2
Materials and Methods
3
Study Design
4
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of all live births resulting from autologous IVF
5
pregnancies at our academic institution from 2004-2017. The study was approved by the Institutional
6
Review Board (#2015P002672) of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Clinical data were derived from
7
our hospital electronic medical record system, IVF, and pathology databases. Donor oocyte and
8
gestational carrier cycles were excluded. Natural and stimulated FET cycles were also excluded, as our
9
center performed small numbers of these types of cycles during the study time period. Our primary
10
outcomes were anatomic, inflammatory, infectious, or vascular/thrombotic placental pathology.
11 12 13
Ovarian stimulation and transfer protocols All patients underwent a fertility evaluation, which routinely included a cycle day 3 follicular
14
stimulating hormone (FSH) level, as well as anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) assessment from 2014
15
onwards. Patients then underwent controlled ovarian hyperstimulation, as previously described19, by
16
luteal-phase gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist, GnRH-antagonist downregulation or
17
GnRH agonist flare protocol, as clinically indicated. Follicle synchronization and/or priming was
18
achieved by oral contraceptive pills (OCPs) (30 µg ethinyl estradiol/0.15 desogestrel, Apri, Teva
19
Pharmaceuticals, North Wales, PA) or ethinyl estradiol patch (0.1mg/day estradiol transdermal system,
20
Vivelle-Dot, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, East Hanover, NJ). Leuprolide acetate (Sandoz Inc.,
21
Princeton, NJ) or GnRH antagonist (0.25 mg ganirelix acetate, Antagon, Organon, Roseland, NJ; or 0.25
22
mg cetrorelix acetate, Cetrotide, EMD-Serono, Rockland, MA) were utilized for pituitary down-
23
regulation per protocol. Recombinant gonadotropins (follitropin beta, Follistim, Merck, Kenilworth, NJ,
24
or follitropin alpha, Gonal-F, EMD-Serono; and menotropins, Menopur or Repronex, Ferring
25
Pharmaceuticals, Parsippany, NJ) were used for stimulation; patients were serially monitored with
26
transvaginal ultrasound and serum estradiol to assess follicular measurements and endometrial thickness.
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Intramuscular human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) (10,000 IU, Novarel, Ferring Pharmaceuticals or
2
10,000 IU, Pregnyl, Merck) was administered to induce final oocyte maturation and 35-37 hours later the
3
patients underwent a transvaginal ultrasound-guided oocyte retrieval.19 Peak estradiol was measured on
4
the day of hCG trigger during the fresh ovarian hyperstimulation cycle that produced the embryo for
5
transfer.
6
Following egg retrieval, oocytes underwent conventional insemination or intracytoplasmic sperm
7
injection (ICSI) as clinically indicated. For those undergoing ICSI, the cumulus cells were stripped from
8
the oocytes 2-3 hours after retrieval. Embryos meant for fresh transfer were cultured until post-retrieval
9
day two, three or five, with day 5 transfer increasing in frequency over time. The decision for number of
10
embryos transferred was made based on institutional and ASRM guidelines.20-23 Cryopreservation of
11
embryos at the 2 pro-nuclei (2PN) stage, day 3, or day 5 was accomplished with slow oocyte freeze or
12
vitrification (starting 1/1/2016) per protocol.
13
Frozen programmed cycles for transfer of previously cryopreserved embryos were performed
14
with leuprolide acetate for pituitary down-regulation, supplemental estrogen (ethinyl estradiol patch, 0.1-
15
0.4mg/day, Vivelle-Dot estradiol transdermal system, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation), and
16
progesterone replacement until 10 weeks gestational age (50mg/day Progesterone intramuscular injection,
17
West-Ward Pharmaceutical Corp., Eatontown, NJ; 100mg vaginal progesterone, Endometrin, Ferring
18
Pharmaceuticals, Parsippany, NJ).
19 20
Placental Pathology Assessment
21
All placentas from deliveries at MGH are received at the MGH pathology department and triaged
22
either to undergo complete (gross and histologic) pathologic examination or storage for two weeks before
23
incineration based on provided clinical history. Criteria for full gross and histopathologic examination
24
include, but are not limited to, a provided clinical history of ART and/or age ≥40 years. Singleton term
25
placentas delivered to women between the ages of 16 and 39 without medical or surgical complications,
26
obstetric complications or medical comorbidities, and with a live born infant with Apgar scores of 7 or
8 1
greater and 1 and 5 minutes with no resuscitation needed do not undergo a full pathologic examination
2
unless neonatal or maternal complications become apparent postpartum. The pathology reports of the
3
study patients were reviewed by one or two experienced placental pathologists (DJR and KB), and the
4
pathologic findings, if present, were categorized as follows: anatomic, inflammatory, infectious,
5
vascular/thrombotic, or other, using accepted diagnostic criteria from the Amsterdam Placental
6
Workshop24 (see Table 1 for all pathology category explanations).
7 8
Obstetric Outcomes
9
Live birth was defined as the live born delivery of a neonate at ≥ 24 weeks of gestation. Birth
10
weight and gestational age were collected for all patients. Birth information (including maternal or fetal
11
indication for delivery, route of delivery, estimated blood loss, delivery complications, and neonatal
12
outcomes), was collected from the electronic medical record. The diagnosis of preeclampsia was made by
13
the patients’ primary or delivering obstetrician and documented in the electronic medical record.
14 15
Statistical Analysis
16
Patient demographic, cycle, and birth outcomes were compared with chi square tests, Student’s t-
17
test, or nonparametric tests, as appropriate. Multiple multivariate logistic regression models were used to
18
estimate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of placental pathology findings, adjusting
19
for maternal age, race, BMI, uterine vs. non-uterine factor diagnosis, number of embryos transferred,
20
number of fetuses born, and gestational age at delivery. We also controlled for date of egg retrieval before
21
or after January 1, 2016, when our laboratory transitioned from a slow freeze technique to vitrification for
22
embryo cryopreservation. Multiple births from the same woman were accounted for using mixed effects
23
logistic regression. All analyses were conducted using the Stata/IC package (StataCorp, College Station,
24
TX), and two-sided significance levels less than 0.05 were considered to be statistically significant.
25 26
Results
9 1 2
Patient demographic and cycle characteristics Autologous IVF cycles from 2004 to 2017 were reviewed for live births. Of 7803 fresh and
3
frozen autologous cycles with a transfer, 3169 cycles led to a live birth (40.6%), of which 1140 met our
4
inclusion criteria with placental pathology available for review from delivery within the Partners
5
Healthcare system (36.0%). Of those live births with pathology, 929 arose from fresh embryo transfers
6
(81.3%) and 211 arose from FETs (18.5%).
7
Demographic and clinical characteristics per transfer leading to live birth are shown for fresh and
8
programmed frozen cycles in Table 2. Women undergoing fresh transfers and FETs were similar in age
9
and predominantly white. Mean BMIs were within the normal range, and ovarian reserve testing by mean
10
day 3 FSH was normal on average (Table 2). Serum AMH tended to be lower in the fresh transfer group,
11
likely due to the practice of freezing all embryos in cases of high ovarian response (3.6 vs. 4.9 in FET
12
group, p = 0.007, Table 2). Most women undergoing fresh transfer were nulliparous (70.6%), while less
13
than half of the FET group were nulliparous (47.9%, p < 0.001). Peak estradiol (E2) level at time of
14
trigger was higher in cycles leading to a FET compared to fresh transfer cycles (2683 vs. 2100 pg/ml,
15
p=0.007; Table 2), as anticipated. Female factor infertility was the most common infertility diagnosis in
16
both groups. Transfers of 1-2 embryos were most commonly performed. Rates of conventional IVF and
17
ICSI fertilization methods were similar between the groups (Table 2). Demographic characteristics per
18
woman at the time of the first oocyte retrieval are additionally shown in Supplemental Table 1.
19 20 21
Obstetric characteristics of pregnancies from fresh and frozen transfers The mean gestational age at delivery was at term in both the fresh transfer and FET groups (37.5
22
vs. 38.0 weeks, p = 0.037; Table 2). There were more preterm deliveries (26.4% vs. 19.9%, p = 0.095)
23
and multifetal gestations (40.3% vs. 23.2%, p < 0.001) in the fresh transfer group compared to the FET
24
group, likely due to preterm deliveries of higher order multiple gestations. Singleton birth weights were
25
similar (3190g vs. 3230g, p = 0.36), while twin birth weights were lower in the fresh transfer group
26
(2485g vs. 2700g, p = 0.036). While there was no difference in the rate of SGA singletons, LGA infants
10 1
were more common in the FET group (5.7% vs. 3.0%, p = 0.013). There were no differences in rates of
2
cesarean delivery (58.8% in FET group vs. 52.9% in fresh transfer group, p = 0.12), or medical
3
comorbidities such as preeclampsia and gestational diabetes, between the groups. Although there was a
4
higher rate of retained placentas in vaginal deliveries in the FET group (13.8% vs. 6.2%, p = 0.013), the
5
rates of postpartum hemorrhage across all deliveries were similar (16.6% vs. 14.4%, respectively, p =
6
0.42).
7 8 9
Placental pathology in all fresh and frozen transfers The rates of specific placental pathologies in all transfers are shown in Table 3. Of the 929 fresh
10
transfer placentas, 97% contained some placental pathology. Of the 211 frozen transfer
11
placentas, 97% also contained some placental pathology. For all transfers, placental weight was
12
similar between the two groups (37.1 percentile in the FET group vs. 34.8 percentile in the fresh transfer
13
group by gestational age using published weight standards, p=0.35).25 There was a higher rate of several
14
anatomic features in the FET group: marginal cord insertion (18.0% vs. 10.8%, respectively, p = 0.004),
15
membranous vessels (6.6% vs. 3.1%, respectively, p = 0.016), and accessory placental lobes (10.4% vs.
16
5.2%, respectively, p = 0.004). Infectious pathology was similar between the two groups, as was
17
inflammatory pathology, though there was a trend towards increased low-grade villitis of unknown
18
etiology (13.7% vs. 9.5%, p = 0.065) in the FET group.
19
There was notably a high overall rate of vascular pathologies in both groups (73.0 vs. 69.5% in
20
the frozen vs. fresh groups, respectively; p = 0.32). FETs were associated with increased intervillous
21
thrombi (24.2% vs. 16.7%, respectively, p = 0.011), subchorionic thrombi (8.1% vs. 2.0%, respectively, p
22
< 0.001), and septal thrombi (2.4% vs. 0.1%, respectively, p < 0.001) compared to fresh cycles. Low-
23
grade fetal vascular malperfusion (FVM) was higher in frozen programmed cycles but the difference did
24
not reach statistical significance. Interestingly, placentas with both cord anomalies and maternal vascular
25
malperfusion (MVM) or FVM were more likely in the FET group compared to the fresh transfer group
11 1
(with MVM: 15.2% vs. 9.8%, respectively, p = 0.02; with FVM: 8.5% vs. 3.7%, respectively, p = 0.002).
2
If placentas from nulliparous women and singleton deliveries were analyzed separately, significantly
3
increased anatomic and vascular pathology persisted in the FET group (Supplemental Table 2).
4
In our adjusted model, placentas arising from programmed frozen cycles had almost twice the
5
odds of marginal cord insertion [aOR 1.87 (CI 1.21, 2.91); p = 0.01; Table 4] and three times the odds of
6
accessory lobe(s) [aOR 2.96 (CI 1.12, 7.79); p = 0.03; Table 4]. Subchorionic thrombi remained more
7
likely in FETs, as well [aOR 3.72 (CI 1.8, 7.71); p < 0.001]. Given the association of cord anomalies with
8
FVM, we also assessed this combination, which was more likely in the FET group [aOR 2.34 (CI 1.22,
9
4.46); p = 0.01].26 The remaining placental pathologies were no longer significantly different between the
10
groups in the adjusted model.
11 12 13
Comparison of placental pathology in day 5 and single embryo fresh and frozen transfers Given the increased prevalence of both day 5 transfers and single embryo transfers over time in
14
the fresh and frozen cycle context, we performed subgroup analyses of these transfers. Amongst day 5
15
transfers and single embryo transfers, anatomic pathology including marginal cord insertion, membranous
16
vessels, and accessory placental lobe remained more common in the FET group (Table 3).
17
Circummarginate or circumvallate membrane insertion occurred less frequently in frozen blastocyst
18
transfers compared to day 5 fresh transfers (6.0% vs. 2.2%, p = 0.042), but this comparison lacked
19
significance when single embryo transfers were assessed alone, likely reflecting the small numbers of
20
placentas with altered membrane insertion.
21
While there were no differences in infectious pathology between fresh and frozen day 5 or single
22
embryo transfers, there was a trend towards increased inflammatory pathology in frozen compared to
23
fresh day 5 transfers (22.3 vs. 15.9%, respectively, p = 0.054), driven by the significantly increased rate
24
of low-grade villitis of unknown etiology in the frozen group (14.1% vs. 8.2%, p = 0.021; Table 3).
25
Frozen single embryo transfers had increased rates of nonspecific inflammation compared to fresh single
26
embryo transfers (7.9% vs. 2.9%, p = 0.48).
12 1
Higher rates of vascular pathology were again seen in both the day 5 and single embryo FET
2
groups, including more subchorionic thrombi (day 5: 8.7% vs. 1.7%, respectively, p < 0.001; single: 7.9%
3
vs. 1.9%, respectively, p = 0.011) and septal thrombi (2.7% vs. 0.2%, respectively, p = 0.003; single:
4
2.0% vs. 0%, respectively, p = 0.043). Day 5 FETs also had more intervillous thrombi (24.5% vs. 16.1%,
5
p = 0.013). Placentas with both cord anomalies and evidence of MVM (day 5: 16.8% vs. 10.1%,
6
respectively, p = 0.017; single: 18.8% vs. 11.7%, respectively, p = 0.089) or FVM (day 5: 9.8% vs. 4.1%,
7
respectively, p = 0.005; single: 10.9% vs. 4.4%, respectively, p = 0.03) were seen more commonly in the
8
FET groups.
9
After controlling for the remaining potential confounders, marginal cord insertion and accessory
10
lobe(s) remained more likely to occur in the day 5 FET group. Interestingly, membranous cord insertion
11
was less likely to occur in the day 5 FET group [aOR 0.3 (CI 0.1, 0.89); p = 0.03; Table 4]. There was
12
also a trend in day 5 FETs towards increased odds of MVM [aOR 1.41 (CI 0.96, 2.05); p = 0.08] and
13
high-grade FVM [aOR 1.62 (CI 0.97, 7.14); p = 0.06]. The odds of subchorionic thrombi [aOR 5.38 (CI
14
2.15, 13.49); p < 0.001) and cord anomalies associated with FVM [aOR 2.39 (CI 1.16, 4.92); p = 0.02]
15
were significantly greater in the day 5 FET group, similar to the all transfers group. On the other hand,
16
when single embryo transfers were assessed alone, adjusting for day of transfer, only vascular pathology
17
(subchorionic thrombi, aOR 10.0 (CI 1.46, 69.1)) remained significantly greater in the FET group
18
compared to fresh transfers. There were similar overall odds of inflammatory and infectious pathology
19
after fresh and frozen day 5 and single embryo transfers.
20 21
Comment
22
Principal findings
23
Placental development is reflective of both embryo and maternal uterine factors during
24
implantation.18 Given the increasing prevalence of ART, as well as rates of supernumerary embryo
25
freezing, “freeze-all” policies, and embryo banking,27-29 understanding the potential impact of embryo
26
transfer cycles on placentation is important for adequate patient counseling and decision making,
13 1
knowledge of obstetric risk factors, and appropriate surveillance during pregnancy. Our study
2
demonstrated that programmed FETs give rise to placentas with a higher rate of anatomic and vascular
3
pathology compared to fresh transfers. After adjustment for potential confounding variables, the principal
4
findings were a significantly higher risk of marginal cord insertion, accessory lobes, cord anomalies with
5
associated FVM, and subchorionic thrombi after programmed FETs compared to fresh embryo transfers.
6
When day 5 fresh transfers were compared to frozen blastocyst transfers, these findings persisted. When
7
single embryo transfers alone were analyzed, subchorionic thrombi remained more common after
8
programmed FETs than fresh transfers.
9 10 11
Clinical and research implications of anatomic and vascular placental pathology findings ART has been previously recognized as a risk factor for anomalous cord insertion, including
12
marginal and membranous insertion, compared to natural conceptions.30,31 In our study, we found a rate of
13
18.0% and 10.8% for marginal cord insertion after programmed frozen vs. fresh transfer, respectively;
14
and a rate of 8.1% and 7.4% for membranous cord insertion after programmed frozen vs. fresh transfer,
15
respectively. Compared to a rate of 6.3% for marginal insertion and 1.5% for membranous amongst
16
623,478 singletons, as described by Ebbing et al. in their population-based registry study, our rates are
17
much higher regardless of transfer type, consistent with prior reports.30 The pathophysiology of this link is
18
unclear but some hypothesize that it could be related to gamete and embryo manipulations.30 Cord
19
insertion anomalies have also been associated with an increased risk of adverse obstetric and perinatal
20
outcomes, such as neonatal ICU admission, growth restriction or low birth weight, fetal malformations,
21
preterm delivery, premature rupture of membranes, placental abruption, preeclampsia, and cesarean
22
delivery.31-34 Given the similar risk factors and adverse outcomes with both membranous and marginal
23
cord insertion, anomalous cord insertion could be considered along a spectrum resulting from abnormal
24
implantation and placental development.31 How much of this process is impacted by the surrounding
25
hormonal milieu is unknown. Finally, ART has not previously been described as a risk factor for
26
accessory lobe formation, although uterine pathology, common in the infertility population, has.35 Despite
14 1
adjusting for uterine factor as a diagnosis, accessory lobes remained more common in the frozen group,
2
suggesting that there may be another mechanism related to abnormal implantation involved in its
3
pathogenesis. These anatomic pathologies did not occur more frequently in frozen single embryo transfers
4
after adjusting for confounders, suggesting that transferring multiple embryos, regardless of number of
5
infants born, may be an independent risk factor for altered anatomic pathology.
6
Vascular pathologies, in particular subchorionic thrombi and FVM in placentas with coexisting
7
cord anomalies, also occurred more commonly in pregnancies conceived after FET compared to fresh
8
transfer after adjusting for potential confounders. Furthermore, there was a trend in day 5 transfers alone
9
towards a higher risk of MVM. Transferring a single embryo appears to reduce the vascular pathology
10
differences between fresh and frozen transfers, though subchorionic thrombi were still more common in
11
the latter after adjusting for confounders. The clinical implications of subchorionic hematomas, which are
12
common in both natural and assisted conceptions, remain poorly understood, and our finding of an
13
increased risk of subchorionic thrombi (residual subchorionic hematomas) after FETs conflicts with a
14
prior study showing that subchorionic hematomas are more common after fresh embryo transfers.36,37
15
FVM, associated with fetal morbidity such as growth restriction and stillbirth, is often a downstream
16
consequence of umbilical cord anomalies or obstruction, as we observed in our data.38,39 Importantly,
17
MVM is commonly linked to an increased risk of hypertensive disorders, even in low risk populations.40
18
We did not see increased preeclampsia in the FET group, in contrast to prior literature showing increases
19
in this outcome after FET.5,10-12,14 However, the small absolute differences in these placental findings
20
between the two groups suggests that a larger sample is needed to identify differences in clinical obstetric
21
outcomes as these disorders remain uncommon and are likely multifactorial.
22
The increased rates of anatomic and vascular pathology after FETs did not lead to lower infant
23
birth weights; in fact, there were more LGA infants in the FET group, consistent with prior
24
literature.13,15,41 Prior studies have found that birth order is unlikely to account for more LGA infants from
25
FET cycles.42 Although mean age, BMI and rates of gestational diabetes were similar between the fresh
26
and FET groups, our results may reflect a subgroup of younger, high-responding women with FETs who
15 1
are more likely to have an LGA infant due to other maternal factors and are less susceptible to the non-
2
physiologic hormonal milieu that predisposes other FET pregnancies to clinically significant anatomic
3
and vascular pathology.
4
Fresh transfers had a higher incidence of preterm deliveries (26.4% vs. 19.9%) and multifetal
5
gestations (40.3% vs. 23.2%) compared to the FET group, likely reflecting the shift in the field towards
6
more single FETs over time. Since singletons and twins had similar rates of preterm deliveries, preterm
7
delivery of higher order multiples likely explains the overall higher rate of preterm deliveries in the fresh
8
transfer group. Rates of cesarean delivery were similar between the fresh and FET groups in our
9
population. However, significantly more vaginal deliveries in the frozen group were complicated by
10
retained placenta (13.8% vs. 6.2%), though rates of postpartum hemorrhage were similar between the
11
groups. Interestingly, prior literature has suggested a possible higher risk of hemorrhage and placenta
12
accreta after FET.5,9,10,15 A potential link between anatomic or vascular pathology and development of an
13
abnormally adherent placenta has not yet been elucidated, though it is possible that tissue hypoxia
14
generated in the setting of this pathology could alter placental development.
15
Gamete and embryo manipulations alone do not explain the increased odds of anatomic and
16
vascular pathology after FETs, as both fresh and frozen transfers involve oocyte retrieval, sperm
17
preparation and embryo development in culture. Therefore, the impacts of embryo freezing or the
18
hormonal environment of the uterus are two other hypotheses to consider. There is some evidence that the
19
freezing and thawing process itself may induce epigenetic that could impact placental development.43
20
Alternatively, Senapati et al., and others, have found that the super-physiologic hormone levels achieved
21
during ovarian stimulation are associated with alterations in endometrial gene expression that may affect
22
remodeling and angiogenesis, perhaps leading to abnormal implantation and placentation.44,45 However,
23
these findings do not explain the increased placental pathology that we see in FETs in the current study;
24
while women undergoing programmed FET take supplemental estrogen, their serum estradiol levels do
25
not reach those of women undergoing ovarian hyperstimulation.46
16 1
Another key consideration is that while patients undergoing fresh transfer develop corpora lutea ,
2
those undergoing programmed FET rely entirely on exogenous intramuscular progesterone. There is
3
increasing evidence that absent or excessive corpora lutea lead to altered levels of progesterone, relaxin,
4
and other growth factors essential for maternal vascular health in early pregnancy, which could explain
5
the increased risk of preeclampsia associated with IVF pregnancies and particularly programmed frozen
6
transfers.15,47-49 Since the corpus luteum is the primary source of steroid hormones supporting early
7
pregnancy as the placenta develops, an altered hormonal milieu impacting uterine vascularization during
8
this time may influence decidualization and placental development, leading to increased vascular
9
pathology.50,51 More research is needed both on a molecular level, evaluating the effect of progesterone
10
supplementation vs. native progesterone on the endometrium and the impact of freezing on the
11
trophoblast cells, and on a clinical level, investigating placental pathology in programmed FETs
12
compared to natural or stimulated FETs.
13 14 15
Strengths and limitations Our study has several strengths. First, IVF was performed at a single large academic fertility
16
center, reducing variation in IVF practice among the patients included in the study. Baseline
17
characteristics such as age, race, BMI, and markers of ovarian reserve were similar between the study
18
groups. There was a relatively low rate of uterine factor, and we were able to control for this variable in
19
our adjusted models. In addition, the majority of patients (> 90%) delivered at our institution, where all
20
patients with a provided history of IVF undergo full placental evaluation, thus reducing bias due to
21
pathological examination solely in the cases of delivery complications. However, a bias towards full
22
examination of complicated pregnancy cannot be completely excluded. Finally, all placental reports and
23
the majority of placental pathology slides were read and reviewed by a placental pathology expert (DJR),
24
minimizing variation and making this potential source of bias consistent across study groups.
25 26
There are also several limitations to this study, notably its retrospective design and inherent variability in pathologic examination. Importantly, our analysis lacks a natural conception control group,
17 1
which we were not able to collect retrospectively in an unbiased manner due to our institution’s placental
2
examination triage criteria. Such a control group should be utilized in future studies assessing placental
3
outcomes from fresh, natural/stimulated frozen, and programmed frozen embryo transfers. Limited power
4
in many of the detailed placental pathology subcategories also restricted our ability to control for
5
confounding variables in our clinical subgroups. Although significantly more women were parous in the
6
FET group, likely reflecting our practice of transferring supernumerary frozen embryos after a prior
7
pregnancy, we do not feel that this skewed our results towards abnormal pathology in the frozen group as
8
prior live birth suggests a favorable uterine environment for implantation. Finally, our findings are not
9
generalizable to all FETs, as natural and stimulated FETs were performed at a low volume at our center
10
during the study period and were not included in the current analysis.
11 12 13
Conclusions In summary, our findings represent a detailed assessment of the pathological findings in placentas
14
arising from live births after fresh and programmed frozen embryo transfers, which contributes to the
15
ongoing discussion of which transfer type is optimal for each patient circumstance. We demonstrated that
16
anatomic and vascular placental pathologies are seen more frequently in pregnancies arising from
17
programmed FETs compared with fresh embryo transfers, including amongst day 5 transfers, though
18
transferring a single blastocyst may reduce abnormal placental development. Therefore, there is placental
19
pathology associated with programmed FETs, but the impact of the specific features on obstetric and
20
perinatal outcomes demands further investigation.
21 22 23 24 25 26
Acknowledgments The authors acknowledge the MGH IVF embryologists and the MGH Pathology assistants and residents for their contribution to the data presented in this study.
18 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44
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Table 1: Pathology Categorization Pathology Anatomic Small placenta by weight Large placenta by weight Marginal cord insertion Membranous cord insertion Coiling anomalies
Two vessel cord Membranous vessels Other cord findings Circummarginate or circumvallate membranes Accessory placental lobe Infectious ACHA-MIR, grade and/or stage ≥ 2 ACHA-FIR, grade and/or stage ≥ 2 Inflammatory Villitis of unknown etiology (VUE), low grade Villitis of unknown etiology (VUE), high grade Chronic deciduitis Chronic histiocytic intervillositis Non-specific inflammation Vascular Maternal vascular malperfusion (MVM)
Fetal vascular malperfusion (FVM), low grade Fetal vascular malperfusion (FVM), high grade
Intervillous thrombi (IVT) Subchorionic thrombi Septal thrombi Disruption
Explanation Less than the 10th percentile by weight for gestational age using standard weight tablea Greater than the 90th percentile by weight for gestational age using standard weight tablea Umbilical cord inserts less than or equal to 1 cm from the placental margin Umbilical cord inserts into the membranesb Hyper- or hypo coiled umbilical cords (4 or more- or 1 or less- coils in 10 cm on average) or rightward coiled umbilical cordc Single umbilical artery Chorionic vessels within the membranes not supported by placental parenchyma e.g. true knots, thin cords, surface nodules, discoloration. Abnormal insertion of the membranes central to the margin of the placenta Succinturiate lobe of the placenta separate from the main disk Acute chorioamnionitis with moderate to severe maternal inflammatory response Acute chorioamnionitis with moderate to severe fetal inflammatory responseb,d Lymphohistiocytic infiltrate within villi, less than 10 contiguous villi affected in any focus, more than 1 focus neededb Lymphohistiocytic infiltrate within villi with 10 or more contiguous villi involved, more than one focus and more than one slide involvedb 50 or more lymphocytes and/or 5 or more plasma cells per high power field in the deciduae A diffuse infiltrate of histiocytes in the maternal vascular spacef,g
Placenta involves two or more of the following: distal villous hypoplasia or accelerated villous maturation, placental infarct, decidual arteriopathy, evidence of acute or chronic abruption, or increased fibrin depositionb Single focus of less than 45 total avascular villi or villous stromal-vascular karyorrhexis or one large vascular thrombusb. Greater than one focus, more than 45 total avascular villi or villous-stromal vascular karyorrhexis, more than 1 large vascular thrombib. Laminated thrombus in maternal vascular space. Laminated thrombus in the subchorionic space in the disk. Thrombus in the septum or within a septal cyst Torn, fragmented, or incomplete disk.
a
Pinar H, Sung CJ, Oyer CE, Singer DB. Reference values for singleton and twin placental weights. Pediatr Pathol Lab Med. 1996;16(6):901-907. Khong TY, Mooney EE, Ariel I, et al. Sampling and definitions of placental lesions: Amsterdam placental workshop group consensus statement. Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2016;140(7):698-713. c van Dijk CC, Franx A, de Laat MW, Bruinse HW, Visser GH, Nikkels PG. The umbilical coiling index in normal pregnancy. J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2002;11(4):280-283. d Redline RW, Faye-Petersen OM, Heller DS, et al. Amniotic infection syndrome: nosology and reproducibility of placental reaction patterns. Pediatr Dev Pathol. 2003;6(5):435-448. e Maroun LL, Mathiesen L, Hedegaard M, Knudsen LE, Larsen LG. Pathologic evaluation of normal and perfused term placental tissue. Pediatr Dev Pathol. 2014;17(5):330-338. f Boyd TK, Redline RW. Chronic histiocytic intervillositis: a placental lesion associated with recurrent reproductive loss. Human pathology. 2000;31(11):1389-1396. g Chen A, Roberts DJ. Placental pathologic lesions with a significant recurrence risk - what not to miss! APMIS : acta pathologica, microbiologica, et immunologica Scandinavica. 2018;126(7):589-601. b
Table 2. Demographic and clinical characteristics of women with live births following fresh vs. programmed frozen cycles Fresh transfers (n=929) Frozen transfers (n=211) P-valuec 35.0 (4.0) 35.2 (3.6) 0.52 Agea 0.62 Race White 727 (78.3%) 160 (75.8%) Black 32 (3.4%) 10 (4.7%) Asian 119 (12.8%) 25 (11.8%) 0.49 Ethnicity Hispanic 10 (1.1%) 3 (1.4%) Other 36 (3.9%) 8 (3.8%) Not specified 12 (1.3%) 4 (1.9%) 23.6 (21.35, 26.8) 23.2 (20.9, 26.3) 0.26 Body mass index (kg/m2)b 656 (70.6%) 101 (47.9%) <0.001 Nulliparity 7.1 (2.2) 7.0 (2.3) 0.44 Day 3 FSH (IU/L)a 3.6 (3.8) 4.9 (5.1) 0.007 AMH (ng/ml)a 2100 (768.9) 2683 (1007.6) <0.001 Peak estradiol on day of trigger (pg/ml)a Infertility Diagnosis Male factor 428 (46.1%) 82 (38.9%) Female factor 469 (50.5%) 134 (63.5%) Tubal factor 138 (14.9%) 35 (16.6%) Ovulatory dysfunction 193 (20.8%) 49 (23.2%) Decreased ovarian reserve 127 (13.7%) 21 (10.0%) Uterine factor 31 (3.3%) 7 (3.3%) Endometriosis 59 (6.4%) 15 (7.1%) Idiopathic 225 (24.2%) 53 (25.1%) Other/Non-infertility 34 (3.7%) 12 (5.7%) <0.001 IVF Stimulation protocol Lupron down-regulation 645 (69.4%) 151 (71.6%) Flare 150 (16.1%) 12 (5.7%) GnRH antagonist 119 (12.8%) 28 (13.3%) Patch 15 (1.6%) 1 (0.5%) 2.0 (0.7) 1.6 (0.57) <0.001 Number of embryos transferreda 0.096 Fertilization method IVF 408 (43.9%) 106 (50.2%) ICSI 521 (56.1%) 105 (49.8%) 37.5 (2.9) 38.0 (3.1) 0.037 Gestational age at deliverya 245 (26.4%) 42 (19.9%) 0.095 Preterm delivery (<37 weeks) 374 (40.3%) 49 (23.2%) <0.001 Multifetal gestation Median birth weightb 3224 (2790, 3600) 3210 (2800, 3610) 0.89 Singletons 2483 (2109, 2802.5) 2700 (2332.5, 2854) 0.040 Twins Small for gestational age infant 61 (11%) 20 (12.4%) 0.111 (singletons) 0.013 Large for gestational age infant 27 (3.0%) 12 (5.7%) (singletons) 0.12 Mode of delivery 437 (47.0%) 87 (41.2%) Vaginal 491 (52.9%) 124 (58.8%) Cesarean 100 (10.8%) 19 (9%) 0.45 Preeclampsia 134 (14.4%) 35 (16.6%) 0.42 Gestational diabetes Hemorrhage (EBL > 500cc for vaginal or 134 (14.4%) 35 (16.6%) 0.42 >1000cc for c-section) Retained placenta requiring manual 27 (6.2%) 12 (13.8%) 0.013 extraction or curettage in vaginal deliveries
a
Mean (standard deviation) Median (interquartile range) c P < 0.05 is significant. b
Table 3. Incidence of placental pathology in live births resulting from fresh vs. programmed frozen cycles All transfers Day 5 transfers Single embryo transfers Fresh Fresh Day 5 d d Frozen (n=211) P-value Frozen blastocyst (n=184) P-value Fresh (n=206) Frozen (n=101) (n=929) (n=466) Mean singleton placental weight (g) 453.5 (115.6) 455.1 (122.6) 0.88 443.8 (111.2) 456.8 (125.4) 0.27 441.7 (110.9) 447 (113.9) Mean placental weight percentile 34.8 (29.3) 37.1 (31.4) 0.35 34.2 (29.5) 37.8 (32.4) 0.20 30.9 (30.6) 32.9 (30.8) 568 (61.1%) 133 (63.0%) 0.61 294 (63.1%) 122 (66.3%) 0.44 149 (72.3%) 69 (68.3%) Anatomic Small (<10%ile) 295 (31.8%) 64 (30.3%) 0.69 155 (33.3%) 57 (31.0%) 0.58 88 (42.7%) 36 (35.6%) Large (>90%ile) 71 (7.6%) 22 (10.4%) 0.18 37 (7.9%) 22 (12.0%) 0.11 17 (8.3%) 8 (7.9%) Marginal cord insertion 100 (10.8%) 38 (18.0%) 0.004 50 (10.7%) 36 (19.6%) 0.003 25 (12.1%) 24 (23.8%) Membranous cord insertion 69 (7.4%) 17 (8.1%) 0.75 39 (8.4%) 16 (8.7%) 0.89 13 (6.3%) 5 (5.0%) Twisting anomalies 43 (4.6%) 8 (3.8%) 0.60 8 (1.7%) 1 (0.5%) 0.25 11 (5.3%) 5 (5.0%) Single umbilical artery 15 (1.6%) 1 (0.5%) 0.20 21 (4.5%) 8 (4.3%) 0.93 4 (1.9%) 1 (1.0%) Membranous vessels 29 (3.1%) 14 (6.6%) 0.016 17 (3.6%) 14 (7.6%) 0.033 6 (2.9%) 8 (7.9%) Other cord findings 42 (4.5%) 4 (1.9%) 0.080 23 (4.9%) 4 (2.2%) 0.11 9 (4.4%) 2 (2.0%) Circummarginate or circumvallate membranes 56 (6.0%) 6 (2.8%) 0.066 28 (6.0%) 4 (2.2%) 0.042 14 (6.8%) 2 (2.0%) Accessory placental lobe 48 (5.2%) 22 (10.4%) 0.004 19 (4.1%) 20 (10.9%) 0.001 7 (3.4%) 10 (9.9%) 242 (26.0%) 62 (29.4%) 0.32 127 (27.3%) 53 (28.8%) 0.69 68 (33.0%) 27 (26.7%) Infectious Acute chorioamnionitis with maternal 0.94 89 (9.6%) 23 (10.9%) 0.56 26 (12.6%) 10 (9.9%) inflammatory response, Moderate to Severe 49 (10.5%) 19 (10.3%) Acute chorioamnionitis with fetal 0.69 37 (4.0%) 8 (3.8%) 0.90 10 (4.9%) 3 (3.0%) inflammatory response, Moderate to Severe 21 (4.5%) 7 (3.8%) 160 (17.2%) 45 (21.3%) 0.16 74 (15.9%) 41 (22.3%) 0.054 38 (18.4%) 26 (25.7%) Inflammatory Villitis of unknown etiology, low-grade 88 (9.5%) 29 (13.7%) 0.065 38 (8.2%) 26 (14.1%) 0.021 22 (10.7%) 16 (15.8%) Villitis of unknown etiology, high-grade 26 (2.8%) 5 (2.4%) 0.73 15 (3.2%) 4 (2.2%) 0.48 7 (3.4%) 3 (3.0%) Chronic deciduitis 40 (4.3%) 10 (4.7%) 0.78 25 (5.4%) 9 (4.9%) 0.81 11 (5.3%) 3 (3.0%) Chronic Histiocytic Intervillositis 4 (0.4%) 2 (0.9%) 0.35 1 (0.2%) 1 (0.5%) 0.50 1 (0.5%) 0 (0.0%) Non-specific inflammation 26 (2.8%) 9 (4.3%) 0.26 11 (2.4%) 9 (4.9%) 0.092 6 (2.9%) 8 (7.9%) 646 (69.5%) 154 (73.0%) 0.32 313 (67.2%) 134 (72.8%) 0.16 141 (68.4%) 72 (71.3%) Vascular MVMa 332 (35.7%) 78 (37.0%) 0.74 147 (31.5%) 71 (38.6%) 0.087 65 (31.6%) 41 (40.6%) FVMb, low grade 83 (8.9%) 27 (12.8%) 0.086 43 (9.2%) 24 (13.0%) 0.15 21 (10.2%) 15 (14.9%) FVMb, high grade 26 (2.8%) 8 (3.8%) 0.44 12 (2.6%) 9 (4.9%) 0.13 4 (1.9%) 3 (3.0%) Intervillous thrombi 155 (16.7%) 51 (24.2%) 0.011 75 (16.1%) 45 (24.5%) 0.013 42 (20.4%) 28 (27.7%) Subchorionic thrombi 19 (2.0%) 17 (8.1%) <0.001 8 (1.7%) 16 (8.7%) <0.001 4 (1.9%) 8 (7.9%) Septal thrombi 1 (0.1%) 5 (2.4%) <0.001 1 (0.2%) 5 (2.7%) 0.003 0 (0.0%) 2 (2.0%) Cord anomalyc with MVM 91 (9.8%) 32 (15.2%) 0.02 47 (10.1%) 31 (16.8%) 0.017 24 (11.7%) 19 (18.8%) Cord anomalyc with FVM 34 (3.7%) 18 (8.5%) 0.002 19 (4.1%) 18 (9.8%) 0.005 9 (4.4%) 11 (10.9%) Disruption 134 (14.4%) 23 (10.9%) 0.18 69 (14.8%) 21 (11.4%) 0.26 25 (12.1%) 9 (8.9%) a MVM refers to maternal vascular malperfusion. b FVM refers to fetal vascular malperfusion. c Cord anomaly includes marginal cord insertion, membranous cord insertion, two vessel cords, coiling anomalies, membranous vessels, and other cord findings (Table 1). d P < 0.05 is significant.
P-valued 0.68 0.61 0.47 0.74 0.92 0.009 0.63 0.89 0.54 0.048 0.29 0.074 0.019 0.26 0.49 0.44 0.14 0.20 0.84 0.35 0.48 0.048 0.61 0.12 0.23 0.57 0.15 0.011 0.043 0.089 0.03 0.40
Table 4. Unadjusted and adjusted odds of clinically significant placental pathologies in programmed frozen transfers compared to fresh transfers All transfers (n = 1140)a Unadjusted ORd Adjusted ORe (aOR) 1.08 (0.8, 1.48) 0.93 (0.67, 1.31) Anatomic Marginal cord insertion 1.82 (1.21, 2.74) 1.87 (1.21, 2.91) Membranous cord insertion 0.45 (0.19, 1.09) 0.32 (0.09, 1.14) Accessory lobe 2.5 (1.08, 5.76) 2.97 (1.1, 7.96) Cord anomaly with small placentab 1.68 (1.03, 2.72) 1.6 (0.95, 2.7) 1.19 (0.84, 1.67) 1.13 (0.79, 1.61) Infectious 1.39 (0.84, 2.29) 1.29 (0.84, 2) Inflammatory Villitis of unknown etiology, high-grade 0.84 (0.3, 2.32) 0.49 (0.11, 2.15) 1.19 (0.84, 1.71) 1.24 (0.84, 1.81) Vascular/thrombotic MVM 1.05 (0.77, 1.44) 1.12 (0.8, 1.57) FVM, high grade 1.37 (0.61, 3.07) 1.47 (0.61, 3.5) Subchorionic thrombi 4.2 (2.14, 8.22) 3.72 (1.8, 7.71) 2.45 (1.36, 4.44) 2.34 (1.22, 4.46) Cord anomaly with FVM Day 5 transfers (n = 650)c 1.15 (0.8, 1.65) 1.06 (0.72, 1.55) Anatomic Marginal cord insertion 2.58 (0.99, 6.76) 2.88 (1.1, 7.57) Membranous cord insertion 0.35 (0.12, 1.01) 0.3 (0.1, 0.89) Accessory lobe 6.72 (1.62, 27.77) 5.32 (1.54, 18.38) Cord anomaly with small placentab 1.77 (1.04, 3.03) 2.03 (0.67, 6.15) 1.08 (0.74, 1.58) 1.05 (0.7, 1.57) Infectious 1.88 (0.02, 152.89) 1.51 (0.73, 3.1) Inflammatory Villitis of unknown etiology, high-grade 0.64 (0.17, 2.31) 0.46 (0.13, 1.64) 1.31 (0.9, 1.91) 1.31 (0.88, 1.95) Vascular/thrombotic MVM 1.36 (0.96, 1.95) 1.41 (0.96, 2.05) FVM, high grade 1.95 (0.81, 4.70) 2.62 (0.97, 7.14) Subchorionic thrombi 5.45 (2.29, 12.97) 5.38 (2.15, 13.49) 2.55 (1.31, 4.98) 2.39 (1.16, 4.92) Cord anomaly with FVM Single embryo transfers (n = 597)d 0.82 (0.49, 1.39) 0.68 (0.34, 1.32) Anatomic Marginal cord insertion 4.71 (1.19, 18.64) 2.35 (0.42, 13.07) Membranous cord insertion 0.28 (0.06, 1.24) 0.21 (0.02, 2.69) Accessory lobe 5.07 (0.91, 28.2) 12.31 (0.65, 234.66) Cord anomaly with small placentab 2.84 (0.67, 12.1) 2.29 (0.36, 14.6) 0.74 (0.44, 1.26) 0.75 (0.38, 1.49) Infectious 1.58 (0.78, 3.21) 1.32 (0.48, 3.67) Inflammatory Villitis of unknown etiology, high-grade 0.8 (0.1, 6.68) 0.62 (0.08, 4.58) 1.14 (0.68, 1.93) 1.41 (0.72, 2.76) Vascular/thrombotic MVM 1.48 (0.9, 2.43) 1.74 (0.9, 3.37) FVM, high grade 1.55 (0.34, 7.04) --Subchorionic thrombi 4.34 (1.28, 14.8) 10.0 (1.46, 69.1) 2.68 (1.07, 6.68) --Cord anomaly with FVM a Adjusted for age, race, BMI, uterine factor infertility, number of embryos transferred, day of embryo transfer, date of retrieval, gestational age at delivery, multiple gestation. b Cord anomaly includes marginal insertion, membranous insertion, SUA, twisting, membranous vessels, and other cord anomalies. c Adjusted for age, race, BMI, uterine factor infertility, number of embryos transferred, date of retrieval, gestational age at delivery, multiple gestation. d Adjusted for age, race, BMI, uterine factor infertility, day of embryo transfer, date of retrieval, gestational age at delivery, multiple gestation. e Presented as odds ratio (95% CI).
Supplemental Table 1. Maternal demographic and cycle characteristics at time of first oocyte retrieval Patients (n=1079) 34.9 (3.9) Age Race White 839 (77.8%) Black 42 (3.9%) Asian 134 (12.4%) Ethnicity Hispanic 12 (1.1%) Non-Hispanic 782 (72.5%) Other 43 (4.0%) Not specified (7) 14 (1.3%) 23.6 (21.3, 26.8) BMI (median, IQR) 758 (70.3%) Nulliparous 7.1 (2.2) Day 3 FSH 4.0 (4.2) AMH (2014-2017) Infertility Diagnosis Male factor 481 (44.6%) Female factor 569 (52.7%) Tubal factor 164 (15.2%) Ovulatory dysfunction 69 (6.4%) PCOS 120 (11.1%) Decreased ovarian reserve 136 (12.6%) Uterine factor 34 (3.2%) Endometriosis 66 (6.1%) Idiopathic 269 (24.9%) Other/Non-infertility 45 (4.2%)
Supplemental Table 2. Clinical subgroup analysis of placental pathology in fresh and programmed frozen transfers All transfers, nulliparous women All transfers, singleton births Fresh (n=699) Frozen (n=127) P-valued Fresh (n=555) Frozen (n=162) P-valued Mean singleton weight (g) 448.9 (115.3) 461.1 (125.6) 0.35 453.5 (115.6) 455.1 (122.6) 0.88 Mean weight %ile 33.6 (29.3) 35.2 (30.7) 0.59 33.5 (31.0) 34.5 (32.2) 0.71 437 (62.5%) 79 (62.2%) 0.95 358 (64.5%) 106 (65.4%) 0.83 Anatomic Small (<10%ile) 236 (33.8%) 42 (33.1%) 0.88 207 (37.3%) 58 (35.8%) 0.73 Large (>90%ile) 53 (7.6%) 10 (7.9%) 0.91 51 (9.2%) 16 (9.9%) 0.79 Marginal cord insertion 79 (11.3%) 25 (19.7%) 0.009 51 (9.2%) 30 (18.5%) <0.001 Membranous cord insertion 55 (7.9%) 7 (5.5%) 0.35 29 (5.2%) 10 (6.2%) 0.64 Twisting anomalies 23 (4.1%) 7 (4.3%) 0.92 11 (5.3%) 4 (3.1%) 0.89 Single umbilical artery 8 (1.4%) 7 (4.3%) 0.41 8 (1.1%) 0 (0%) 0.54 Membranous vessels 23 (3.3%) 11 (8.7%) 0.005 9 (1.6%) 11 (6.8%) <0.001 Other cord findings 19 (2.7%) 2 (1.6%) 0.45 18 (3.2%) 2 (1.2%) 0.17 Circummarginate or circumvallate membranes 41 (5.9%) 2 (1.6%) 0.045 32 (5.8%) 3 (1.9%) 0.042 Accessory placental lobe 37 (5.3%) 17 (13.4%) <0.001 25 (4.5%) 16 (9.9%) 0.010 212 (30.3%) 47 (37.0%) 0.14 179 (32.3%) 51 (31.5%) 0.85 Infectious Acute chorioamnionitis with maternal inflammatory 76 (10.9%) 18 (14.2%) 0.28 62 (11.2%) 18 (11.1%) 0.98 response, Moderate to Severe Acute chorioamnionitis with fetal inflammatory response, 31 (4.4%) 8 (6.3%) 0.36 24 (4.3%) 8 (4.9%) 0.74 Moderate to Severe 119 (17.0%) 25 (19.7%) 0.47 102 (18.4%) 33 (20.4%) 0.57 Inflammatory Villitis of unknown etiology, low-grade 69 (9.9%) 16 (12.6%) 0.35 60 (10.8%) 20 (12.3%) 0.59 Villitis of unknown etiology, high-grade 16 (2.3%) 3 (2.4%) 0.96 15 (2.7%) 3 (1.9%) 0.54 Chronic deciduitis 26 (3.7%) 6 (4.7%) 0.59 24 (4.3%) 5 (3.1%) 0.48 Chronic Histiocytic Intervillositis 4 (0.6%) 1 (0.8%) 0.77 3 (0.5%) 1 (0.6%) 0.91 Non-specific inflammation 21 (3.0%) 6 (4.7%) 0.32 17 (3.1%) 8 (4.9%) 0.25 480 (68.7%) 95 (74.8%) 0.17 373 (67.2%) 117 (72.2%) 0.23 Vascular a MVM 249 (35.6%) 49 (38.6%) 0.52 178 (32.1%) 59 (36.4%) 0.30 FVMb, low grade 54 (7.7%) 18 (14.2%) 0.018 47 (8.5%) 21 (13.0%) 0.086 FVMb, high grade 21 (3.0%) 4 (3.1%) 0.93 11 (2.0%) 4 (2.5%) 0.70 Intervillous thrombi 114 (16.3%) 32 (25.2%) 0.016 91 (16.4%) 36 (22.2%) 0.087 Subchorionic thrombi 12 (1.7%) 10 (7.9%) <0.001 11 (2.0%) 14 (8.6%) <0.001 Septal thrombi 1 (0.1%) 2 (1.6%) 0.014 1 (0.2%) 2 (1.2%) 0.067 Cord anomalyc with MVM 69 (9.9%) 19 (15.0%) 0.087 39 (7.0%) 24 (14.8%) 0.002 Cord anomalyc with FVM 26 (3.7%) 10 (7.9%) 0.035 14 (2.5%) 14 (8.6%) <0.001 Disruption 102 (14.6%) 13 (10.2%) 0.19 81 (14.6%) 16 (9.9%) 0.12 a MVM refers to maternal vascular malperfusion. b FVM refers to fetal vascular malperfusion. c Cord anomaly includes marginal cord insertion, membranous cord insertion, two vessel cords, coiling anomalies, membranous vessels, and other cord findings (Table 1). d P < 0.05 is significant.