Paul C. Magarelli, M.D., Ph.D. Reproductive Medicine & Fertility Center,
Colorado Springs www.475-baby.com
Diane Cridennda, L.Ac. East Winds Acupuncture www.eastwindsacupuncture.com
Mel Cohen, MBA Reproductive Medicine & Fertility Center, Colorado
Springs
Abstract
Take Home babies’ rates (THB) have been the sine quo non of IVF
outcomes. Pregnancy rates (PR) can overestimate the expected success of a
high-technology treatment for patients and many clinics use PR as means of
marketing their practices. This has caused disillusionment in patients and
government regulation (especially in the U.S.). Each IVF program strives to
improve reproductive outcomes (low ectopic rates, low miscarriage rates and
improved take home baby rates – live births). Usually the approach to these
improvements are changes in IVF protocols, media adjustments in the IVF lab,
patient selection, and subtle nudges towards egg donors for poor responders.
Another approach has been the inclusion of alternative medical modalities:
acupuncture, massage therapy, stress reduction techniques, herbal medicine. We,
and others, have chosen to incorporate Acupuncture into our IVF treatment
protocols. Recently we presented two studies that demonstrated improvements in
pregnancy rates in Good and Poor IVF Responders with the inclusion of two
specific Acupuncture Protocols (Steiner-Victorin and Paulus et. Al). In the poor
responders group we demonstrated a positive adjustment to Poor Responders
pregnancy rates (PR) with improvements in PR in the Poor Responders group
equivalent to good responders. In the Good Responders study we demonstrated a
trend towards improved PR (5% above controls, not significant at p < 0.05).
With these observations noted we have continued our investigation and are
reporting on reproductive outcomes in all IVF patients treated with Acupuncture
compared to those untreated.
Materials and Methods: In this study 130 IVF cycles were
reviewed in a retrospective fashion. Patients demographics, years infertile, age
of male partners, sperm parameters, Day 3 FSH, Pulsatility Indices, Weight, BMI,
infertility diagnoses, IVF treatment protocols were statistically similar for
both the Controls (C) and Acupuncture (Ac) treatment groups. All patients that
completed an IVF cycle (retrieval, transfer) were included. There were 82 in the
C group (non acupuncture) and 48 in the Ac group. For the C vs. Ac groups a
summary of their statistics are as follows: Mean Age was 32.6 vs. 32.7, Day 3
FSH was 5.5 vs. 6.4, Pulsatility Indices for right and left uterine arteries
were 1.5 and 1.2 vs. 1.4 and 1.0; Sperm counts were 69 vs. 67 million/ml; Sperm
motility (%) were 48 vs. 53%, and Sperm morphologies were 6 % normal vs. 7%.
Results: Pregnancy rates for the Ac group were statistically
similar, although numerically higher, versus C (50% v 45% at P < 0.05). Ac
miscarriage rates (SAB) were statistically lower than the C (8 % vs. 11%
at p <0.01). There were no ectopic pregnancies in the Ac group ( P <
0.01). Live Births were significantly better in the Ac v C groups (42% v 38%). A
surprising observation was that multiples pregnancies were significantly lower
in the Ac vs. C groups (17 % vs. 22%). Average eggs retrieved were statistically
similar 15 vs. 15 for Ac and C respectively.
Conclusions: IVF programs can significantly improve their
IVF outcomes ( PR, THB, SAB and Ectopic) by adding acupuncture protocols,
specifically Steiner Victorin and Paulus. Further studies of Traditional Chine
Medicine modalities of treatment are underway. We are organizing a multicenter
prospective study to confirm our observations.