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Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East

BACKGROUND: This research describes current clinical and demographic features sampled from reproductive endocrinology programs currently offering in vitro fertilization (IVF) in the Middle East. METHODS: Clinic leadership provided data via questionnaire on patient demographics, demand for IVF servic...

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Autores principales: Sills, Eric Scott, Qublan, Hussein S, Blumenfeld, Zeev, Dizaj, Ahmad VT, Revel, Ariel, Coskun, Serdar, Jaoude, Imad Abou, Serour, Gamal, Eskandar, Mamdoh, Khalili, Mohammad Ali, Demirol, Aygul, Trokoudes, Krinos, Ocal, Pelin, Sultan, Abdul Munaf, Lotto, Benjamin A, El-Kareh, Adele
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2041947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17725823
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-1050-4-3
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author Sills, Eric Scott
Qublan, Hussein S
Blumenfeld, Zeev
Dizaj, Ahmad VT
Revel, Ariel
Coskun, Serdar
Jaoude, Imad Abou
Serour, Gamal
Eskandar, Mamdoh
Khalili, Mohammad Ali
Demirol, Aygul
Trokoudes, Krinos
Ocal, Pelin
Sultan, Abdul Munaf
Lotto, Benjamin A
El-Kareh, Adele
author_facet Sills, Eric Scott
Qublan, Hussein S
Blumenfeld, Zeev
Dizaj, Ahmad VT
Revel, Ariel
Coskun, Serdar
Jaoude, Imad Abou
Serour, Gamal
Eskandar, Mamdoh
Khalili, Mohammad Ali
Demirol, Aygul
Trokoudes, Krinos
Ocal, Pelin
Sultan, Abdul Munaf
Lotto, Benjamin A
El-Kareh, Adele
author_sort Sills, Eric Scott
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This research describes current clinical and demographic features sampled from reproductive endocrinology programs currently offering in vitro fertilization (IVF) in the Middle East. METHODS: Clinic leadership provided data via questionnaire on patient demographics, demand for IVF services, annual cycle volume, indications for IVF, number of embryos transferred, twinning frequency, local regulations governing range of available adjunct therapies, time interval between initial enrollment and beginning IVF as well as information about other aspects of IVF at each center. RESULTS: Data were received from representative IVF clinics (n = 13) in Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. Mean (± SD) age of respondents was 47.8 ± 8 yrs, with average tenure at their facility of 11.2 ± 6 yrs. Estimated total number of IVF programs in each nation responding ranged from 1 to 91. All respondents reported individual participation in accredited CME activity within 24 months. 76.9% performed embryo transfers personally; blastocyst transfer was available at 84.6% of centers. PGD was offered at all sites. In this population, male factor infertility accounted for most IVF consultations and the majority (59.1%) of female IVF patients were < 35 yrs of age. Prevalence of smoking among female IVF patients was 7.2%. Average number of embryos transferred was 2.4 (± 0.4) for patients at age < 35 yrs, and 2.9 (± 0.8) at age > 41 yrs. For these age categories, twinning (any type) was observed in 22.6 (± 10.8)% and 13.7 (± 10.4)%, respectively. In 2005, the average number of IVF cycles completed at study sites was 1194 (range 363–3500) and 1266 (range 263–4000) in 2006. Frozen embryo transfers accounted for 17.2% of cycles at these centers in 2005. Average interval between initial enrollment and IVF cycle start was 8 weeks (range 0.3–3.5 months). CONCLUSION: This sampling of diverse IVF clinics in the Middle East, believed to be the first of its kind, identified several common factors. Government registry or oversight of clinical IVF practice was limited or nonexistent in most countries, yet number of embryos transferred was nevertheless fairly uniform. Sophisticated reproductive health services in this region are associated with minimal delay (often < 8 weeks) from initial presentation to IVF cycle start. Most Middle East nations do not maintain a comprehensive IVF database, and there is no independent agency to collect transnational data on IVF clinics. Our pilot study demonstrates that IVF programs in the Middle East could contribute voluntarily to collaborative network efforts to share clinical data, improve quality of care, and increase patient access to reproductive services in the region.
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spelling pubmed-20419472007-10-25 Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East Sills, Eric Scott Qublan, Hussein S Blumenfeld, Zeev Dizaj, Ahmad VT Revel, Ariel Coskun, Serdar Jaoude, Imad Abou Serour, Gamal Eskandar, Mamdoh Khalili, Mohammad Ali Demirol, Aygul Trokoudes, Krinos Ocal, Pelin Sultan, Abdul Munaf Lotto, Benjamin A El-Kareh, Adele J Exp Clin Assist Reprod Research BACKGROUND: This research describes current clinical and demographic features sampled from reproductive endocrinology programs currently offering in vitro fertilization (IVF) in the Middle East. METHODS: Clinic leadership provided data via questionnaire on patient demographics, demand for IVF services, annual cycle volume, indications for IVF, number of embryos transferred, twinning frequency, local regulations governing range of available adjunct therapies, time interval between initial enrollment and beginning IVF as well as information about other aspects of IVF at each center. RESULTS: Data were received from representative IVF clinics (n = 13) in Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. Mean (± SD) age of respondents was 47.8 ± 8 yrs, with average tenure at their facility of 11.2 ± 6 yrs. Estimated total number of IVF programs in each nation responding ranged from 1 to 91. All respondents reported individual participation in accredited CME activity within 24 months. 76.9% performed embryo transfers personally; blastocyst transfer was available at 84.6% of centers. PGD was offered at all sites. In this population, male factor infertility accounted for most IVF consultations and the majority (59.1%) of female IVF patients were < 35 yrs of age. Prevalence of smoking among female IVF patients was 7.2%. Average number of embryos transferred was 2.4 (± 0.4) for patients at age < 35 yrs, and 2.9 (± 0.8) at age > 41 yrs. For these age categories, twinning (any type) was observed in 22.6 (± 10.8)% and 13.7 (± 10.4)%, respectively. In 2005, the average number of IVF cycles completed at study sites was 1194 (range 363–3500) and 1266 (range 263–4000) in 2006. Frozen embryo transfers accounted for 17.2% of cycles at these centers in 2005. Average interval between initial enrollment and IVF cycle start was 8 weeks (range 0.3–3.5 months). CONCLUSION: This sampling of diverse IVF clinics in the Middle East, believed to be the first of its kind, identified several common factors. Government registry or oversight of clinical IVF practice was limited or nonexistent in most countries, yet number of embryos transferred was nevertheless fairly uniform. Sophisticated reproductive health services in this region are associated with minimal delay (often < 8 weeks) from initial presentation to IVF cycle start. Most Middle East nations do not maintain a comprehensive IVF database, and there is no independent agency to collect transnational data on IVF clinics. Our pilot study demonstrates that IVF programs in the Middle East could contribute voluntarily to collaborative network efforts to share clinical data, improve quality of care, and increase patient access to reproductive services in the region. BioMed Central 2007-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2041947/ /pubmed/17725823 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-1050-4-3 Text en Copyright © 2007 Sills et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Sills, Eric Scott
Qublan, Hussein S
Blumenfeld, Zeev
Dizaj, Ahmad VT
Revel, Ariel
Coskun, Serdar
Jaoude, Imad Abou
Serour, Gamal
Eskandar, Mamdoh
Khalili, Mohammad Ali
Demirol, Aygul
Trokoudes, Krinos
Ocal, Pelin
Sultan, Abdul Munaf
Lotto, Benjamin A
El-Kareh, Adele
Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East
title Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East
title_full Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East
title_fullStr Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East
title_full_unstemmed Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East
title_short Regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: A collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the Middle East
title_sort regional clinical practice patterns in reproductive endocrinology: a collaborative transnational pilot survey of in vitro fertilization programs in the middle east
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2041947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17725823
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-1050-4-3
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