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Lower risks of adverse outcome in twins conceived by artificial reproductive techniques compared with spontaneously conceived twins.

, , , , , , , , , and . Hum Reprod, 13 (7): 2005--2008 (July 1998)

Abstract

The outcomes of twins conceived by 136 women after medical assistance (MA) such as ovulation induction with or without assisted reproductive techniques, and twins conceived spontaneously (SP) by 72 women were compared. All 208 women were monitored from < 20 weeks gestation; they all delivered at > or = 24 weeks gestation. The chorionicity of the placenta was diagnosed antenatally and confirmed after delivery. There were 10 perinatal deaths; the physical and neurological status of the remaining 406 infants was assessed at 1 year of corrected age. There were no differences in gestational age at birth, the birth weights of the larger and smaller twins, the birth weight discordance, or the incidence of life-threatening major malformations between groups. Adverse infant outcomes, such as death, cerebral palsy and mental retardation occurred in nine (3.3\%) of 272 MA twins compared with 12 (8.3\%) of 144 SP twins (P < 0.05). The placenta was monochorionic in only three (2.2\%) of 136 MA twin pregnancies compared with 41 (57\%) of 72 SP twin pregnancies (P < 0.001). Of the 21 infants with adverse outcomes, nine had monochorionic placentas. Thus, the risk of an adverse outcome was 2.8-fold higher (95\% confidence interval (CI) 1.2-6.4) in monochorionic twins than in dichorionic twins (10 versus 3.7\%; P < 0.05). There was no difference in the incidence of adverse infant outcomes between SP (4.8\%) and MA (3.4\%) twins with dichorionic placentas. These findings suggest that ovulation induction in itself was not associated with an adverse outcome of twin pregnancies. The lower frequency of monochorionic placentas in MA twins may have been responsible for the lower risk of an adverse outcome in MA twins.

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