Elective freezing of embryos versus fresh embryo transfer in IVF: a multicentre randomized controlled trial in the UK (E-Freeze)
Elective freezing of embryos versus fresh embryo transfer in IVF: a multicentre randomized controlled trial in the UK (E-Freeze)
Study question: does a policy of elective freezing of embryos, followed by frozen embryo transfer result in a higher healthy baby rate, after first embryo transfer, when compared with the current policy of transferring fresh embryos?
Summary answer: this study, although limited by sample size, provides no evidence to support the adoption of a routine policy of elective freeze in preference to fresh embryo transfer in order to improve IVF effectiveness in obtaining a healthy baby.
What is known already: the policy of freezing all embryos followed by frozen embryo transfer is associated with a higher live birth rate for high responders but a similar/lower live birth after first embryo transfer and cumulative live birth rate for normal responders. Frozen embryo transfer is associated with a lower risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), preterm delivery and low birthweight babies but a higher risk of large babies and pre-eclampsia. There is also uncertainty about long-term outcomes, hence shifting to a policy of elective freezing for all remains controversial given the delay in treatment and extra costs involved in freezing all embryos.
Study design, size and duration: a pragmatic two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial (E-Freeze) was conducted across 18 clinics in the UK from 2016 to 2019. A total of 619 couples were randomized (309 to elective freeze/310 to fresh). The primary outcome was a healthy baby after first embryo transfer (term, singleton live birth with appropriate weight for gestation); secondary outcomes included OHSS, live birth, clinical pregnancy, pregnancy complications and cost-effectiveness.
Participants/materials, setting, methods: couples undergoing their first, second or third cycle of IVF/ICSI treatment, with at least three good quality embryos on Day 3 where the female partner was ≥18 and <42 years of age were eligible. Those using donor gametes, undergoing preimplantation genetic testing or planning to freeze all their embryos were excluded. IVF/ICSI treatment was carried out according to local protocols. Women were followed up for pregnancy outcome after first embryo transfer following randomization.
Main results and the role of chance: Of the 619 couples randomized, 307 and 309 couples in the elective freeze and fresh transfer arms, respectively, were included in the primary analysis. There was no evidence of a statistically significant difference in outcomes in the elective freeze group compared to the fresh embryo transfer group: healthy baby rate {20.3% (62/307) versus 24.4% (75/309); risk ratio (RR), 95% CI: 0.84, 0.62 to 1.15}; OHSS (3.6% versus 8.1%; RR, 99% CI: 0.44, 0.15 to 1.30); live birth rate (28.3% versus 34.3%; RR, 99% CI 0.83, 0.65 to 1.06); and miscarriage (14.3% versus 12.9%; RR, 99% CI: 1.09, 0.72 to 1.66). Adherence to allocation was poor in the elective freeze group. The elective freeze approach was more costly and was unlikely to be cost-effective in a UK National Health Service context.
Limitations, reasons for caution: we have only reported on first embryo transfer after randomization; data on the cumulative live birth rate requires further follow-up. Planned target sample size was not obtained and the non-adherence to allocation rate was high among couples in the elective freeze arm owing to patient preference for fresh embryo transfer, but an analysis which took non-adherence into account showed similar results.
Wider implications of the finding: results from the E-Freeze trial do not lend support to the policy of electively freezing all for everyone, taking both efficacy, safety and costs considerations into account. This method should only be adopted if there is a definite clinical indication.
Study funding/competing interests: NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme (13/115/82). This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (NIHR unique award identifier) using UK aid from the UK Government to support global health research. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the UK Department of Health and Social Care. J.L.B., C.C., E.J., P.H., J.J.K., L.L. and G.S. report receipt of funding from NIHR, during the conduct of the study. J.L.B., E.J., P.H., K.S. and L.L. report receipt of funding from NIHR, during the conduct of the study and outside the submitted work. A.M. reports grants from NIHR personal fees from Merck Serono, personal fees for lectures from Merck Serono, Ferring and Cooks outside the submitted work; travel/meeting support from Ferring and Pharmasure and participation in a Ferring advisory board. S.B. reports receipt of royalties and licenses from Cambridge University Press, a board membership role for NHS Grampian and other financial or non-financial interests related to his roles as Editor-in-Chief of Human Reproduction Open and Editor and Contributing Author of Reproductive Medicine for the MRCOG, Cambridge University Press. D.B. reports grants from NIHR, during the conduct of the study; grants from European Commission, grants from Diabetes UK, grants from NIHR, grants from ESHRE, grants from MRC, outside the submitted work. Y.C. reports speaker fees from Merck Serono, and advisory board role for Merck Serono and shares in Complete Fertility. P.H. reports membership of the HTA Commissioning Committee. E.J. reports membership of the NHS England and NIHR Partnership Programme, membership of five Data Monitoring Committees (Chair of two), membership of six Trial Steering Committees (Chair of four), membership of the Northern Ireland Clinical Trials Unit Advisory Group and Chair of the board of Oxford Brain Health Clinical Trials Unit. R.M. reports consulting fees from Gedeon Richter, honorarium from Merck, support fees for attendance at educational events and conferences for Merck, Ferring, Bessins and Gedeon Richter, payments for participation on a Merck Safety or Advisory Board, Chair of the British Fertility Society and payments for an advisory role to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. G.S. reports travel and accommodation fees for attendance at a health economic advisory board from Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. N.R.-F. reports shares in Nurture Fertility. Other authors' competing interests: none declared. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN: 61225414. TRIAL REGISTRATION DATE: 29 December 2015. DATE OF FIRST PATIENT’S ENROLMENT: 16 February 2016.
IVF / frozen embryo transfer / freeze all / healthy baby / cost-effectiveness / fresh embryo transfer / infertility / willingness to pay
476-487
Maheshwari, Abha
ec3e24a4-c2ce-4b48-aac7-475fc569dd90
Bell, Jennifer L
1d6aa807-f47d-4050-90e8-6774fd5ae4d7
Bhide, Priya
8669c813-31d5-4e07-9573-fc308bb059e1
Brison, Daniel
95076105-60d2-4fbe-9c88-e0f1cbc75787
Child, Tim
81fcfc94-1a33-452c-bf65-e57326331bc2
Chong, Huey Yi
2b20e3be-1025-4659-90c5-1fce1602a892
Cheong, Ying
4efbba2a-3036-4dce-82f1-8b4017952c83
Cole, Christina
231f06a8-c764-4c96-a7f6-f26ce4412af1
Coomarasamy, Arri
19f618a5-ab94-4378-88ad-1a61ae83ec25
Cutting, Rachel
d5199d80-910d-43a6-9624-f3b810512fe0
Hardy, Pollyanna
6a9c6df8-9e5b-4300-8fc7-03fed7b390bd
Hamoda, Haitham
35db8612-c0e2-49d9-a44a-a84d6d6dd3aa
Juszczak, Edmund
9267758e-8ab8-44c7-ab14-48ef82fa6b6e
Khalaf, Yacoub
30a8e00e-e95d-46fc-85ee-4d67c197275a
Kurinczuk, Jennifer J
7a90c97c-df95-4d03-a0f8-2cae977ceb8d
Lavery, Stuart
364f825b-baa9-47f0-8782-0ea4e339f590
Linsell, Louise
bf220517-49cd-4fbb-8666-19d2a1de1257
Macklon, Nick
d08e4844-96cf-4333-aa84-aec9b8febb42
Mathur, Raj
b8a681ef-b8e8-4830-af93-553d75186a60
Pundir, Jyotsna
1b31af0d-93bf-4554-9299-73091809f209
Raine-Fenning, Nick
6af1c368-3f81-4730-9ad8-db80d23533dd
Rajkohwa, Madhurima
2a7f7891-ef8e-469d-82bb-a74ffc288545
Scotland, Graham
af689445-91cd-4e94-8aa8-ab47f815dfad
Stanbury, Kayleigh
dad6e57a-6185-4303-8453-c088620e76df
Troup, Stephen
ec79efab-919d-46c1-9b91-7a4b397fbc17
Bhattacharya, Siladitya
4c912cdf-d691-49e0-bf8c-cdf0e40fc275
1 March 2022
Maheshwari, Abha
ec3e24a4-c2ce-4b48-aac7-475fc569dd90
Bell, Jennifer L
1d6aa807-f47d-4050-90e8-6774fd5ae4d7
Bhide, Priya
8669c813-31d5-4e07-9573-fc308bb059e1
Brison, Daniel
95076105-60d2-4fbe-9c88-e0f1cbc75787
Child, Tim
81fcfc94-1a33-452c-bf65-e57326331bc2
Chong, Huey Yi
2b20e3be-1025-4659-90c5-1fce1602a892
Cheong, Ying
4efbba2a-3036-4dce-82f1-8b4017952c83
Cole, Christina
231f06a8-c764-4c96-a7f6-f26ce4412af1
Coomarasamy, Arri
19f618a5-ab94-4378-88ad-1a61ae83ec25
Cutting, Rachel
d5199d80-910d-43a6-9624-f3b810512fe0
Hardy, Pollyanna
6a9c6df8-9e5b-4300-8fc7-03fed7b390bd
Hamoda, Haitham
35db8612-c0e2-49d9-a44a-a84d6d6dd3aa
Juszczak, Edmund
9267758e-8ab8-44c7-ab14-48ef82fa6b6e
Khalaf, Yacoub
30a8e00e-e95d-46fc-85ee-4d67c197275a
Kurinczuk, Jennifer J
7a90c97c-df95-4d03-a0f8-2cae977ceb8d
Lavery, Stuart
364f825b-baa9-47f0-8782-0ea4e339f590
Linsell, Louise
bf220517-49cd-4fbb-8666-19d2a1de1257
Macklon, Nick
d08e4844-96cf-4333-aa84-aec9b8febb42
Mathur, Raj
b8a681ef-b8e8-4830-af93-553d75186a60
Pundir, Jyotsna
1b31af0d-93bf-4554-9299-73091809f209
Raine-Fenning, Nick
6af1c368-3f81-4730-9ad8-db80d23533dd
Rajkohwa, Madhurima
2a7f7891-ef8e-469d-82bb-a74ffc288545
Scotland, Graham
af689445-91cd-4e94-8aa8-ab47f815dfad
Stanbury, Kayleigh
dad6e57a-6185-4303-8453-c088620e76df
Troup, Stephen
ec79efab-919d-46c1-9b91-7a4b397fbc17
Bhattacharya, Siladitya
4c912cdf-d691-49e0-bf8c-cdf0e40fc275
Maheshwari, Abha, Bell, Jennifer L, Bhide, Priya, Brison, Daniel, Child, Tim, Chong, Huey Yi, Cheong, Ying, Cole, Christina, Coomarasamy, Arri, Cutting, Rachel, Hardy, Pollyanna, Hamoda, Haitham, Juszczak, Edmund, Khalaf, Yacoub, Kurinczuk, Jennifer J, Lavery, Stuart, Linsell, Louise, Macklon, Nick, Mathur, Raj, Pundir, Jyotsna, Raine-Fenning, Nick, Rajkohwa, Madhurima, Scotland, Graham, Stanbury, Kayleigh, Troup, Stephen and Bhattacharya, Siladitya
(2022)
Elective freezing of embryos versus fresh embryo transfer in IVF: a multicentre randomized controlled trial in the UK (E-Freeze).
Human Reproduction, 37 (3), .
(doi:10.1093/humrep/deab279).
Abstract
Study question: does a policy of elective freezing of embryos, followed by frozen embryo transfer result in a higher healthy baby rate, after first embryo transfer, when compared with the current policy of transferring fresh embryos?
Summary answer: this study, although limited by sample size, provides no evidence to support the adoption of a routine policy of elective freeze in preference to fresh embryo transfer in order to improve IVF effectiveness in obtaining a healthy baby.
What is known already: the policy of freezing all embryos followed by frozen embryo transfer is associated with a higher live birth rate for high responders but a similar/lower live birth after first embryo transfer and cumulative live birth rate for normal responders. Frozen embryo transfer is associated with a lower risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), preterm delivery and low birthweight babies but a higher risk of large babies and pre-eclampsia. There is also uncertainty about long-term outcomes, hence shifting to a policy of elective freezing for all remains controversial given the delay in treatment and extra costs involved in freezing all embryos.
Study design, size and duration: a pragmatic two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial (E-Freeze) was conducted across 18 clinics in the UK from 2016 to 2019. A total of 619 couples were randomized (309 to elective freeze/310 to fresh). The primary outcome was a healthy baby after first embryo transfer (term, singleton live birth with appropriate weight for gestation); secondary outcomes included OHSS, live birth, clinical pregnancy, pregnancy complications and cost-effectiveness.
Participants/materials, setting, methods: couples undergoing their first, second or third cycle of IVF/ICSI treatment, with at least three good quality embryos on Day 3 where the female partner was ≥18 and <42 years of age were eligible. Those using donor gametes, undergoing preimplantation genetic testing or planning to freeze all their embryos were excluded. IVF/ICSI treatment was carried out according to local protocols. Women were followed up for pregnancy outcome after first embryo transfer following randomization.
Main results and the role of chance: Of the 619 couples randomized, 307 and 309 couples in the elective freeze and fresh transfer arms, respectively, were included in the primary analysis. There was no evidence of a statistically significant difference in outcomes in the elective freeze group compared to the fresh embryo transfer group: healthy baby rate {20.3% (62/307) versus 24.4% (75/309); risk ratio (RR), 95% CI: 0.84, 0.62 to 1.15}; OHSS (3.6% versus 8.1%; RR, 99% CI: 0.44, 0.15 to 1.30); live birth rate (28.3% versus 34.3%; RR, 99% CI 0.83, 0.65 to 1.06); and miscarriage (14.3% versus 12.9%; RR, 99% CI: 1.09, 0.72 to 1.66). Adherence to allocation was poor in the elective freeze group. The elective freeze approach was more costly and was unlikely to be cost-effective in a UK National Health Service context.
Limitations, reasons for caution: we have only reported on first embryo transfer after randomization; data on the cumulative live birth rate requires further follow-up. Planned target sample size was not obtained and the non-adherence to allocation rate was high among couples in the elective freeze arm owing to patient preference for fresh embryo transfer, but an analysis which took non-adherence into account showed similar results.
Wider implications of the finding: results from the E-Freeze trial do not lend support to the policy of electively freezing all for everyone, taking both efficacy, safety and costs considerations into account. This method should only be adopted if there is a definite clinical indication.
Study funding/competing interests: NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme (13/115/82). This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (NIHR unique award identifier) using UK aid from the UK Government to support global health research. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the UK Department of Health and Social Care. J.L.B., C.C., E.J., P.H., J.J.K., L.L. and G.S. report receipt of funding from NIHR, during the conduct of the study. J.L.B., E.J., P.H., K.S. and L.L. report receipt of funding from NIHR, during the conduct of the study and outside the submitted work. A.M. reports grants from NIHR personal fees from Merck Serono, personal fees for lectures from Merck Serono, Ferring and Cooks outside the submitted work; travel/meeting support from Ferring and Pharmasure and participation in a Ferring advisory board. S.B. reports receipt of royalties and licenses from Cambridge University Press, a board membership role for NHS Grampian and other financial or non-financial interests related to his roles as Editor-in-Chief of Human Reproduction Open and Editor and Contributing Author of Reproductive Medicine for the MRCOG, Cambridge University Press. D.B. reports grants from NIHR, during the conduct of the study; grants from European Commission, grants from Diabetes UK, grants from NIHR, grants from ESHRE, grants from MRC, outside the submitted work. Y.C. reports speaker fees from Merck Serono, and advisory board role for Merck Serono and shares in Complete Fertility. P.H. reports membership of the HTA Commissioning Committee. E.J. reports membership of the NHS England and NIHR Partnership Programme, membership of five Data Monitoring Committees (Chair of two), membership of six Trial Steering Committees (Chair of four), membership of the Northern Ireland Clinical Trials Unit Advisory Group and Chair of the board of Oxford Brain Health Clinical Trials Unit. R.M. reports consulting fees from Gedeon Richter, honorarium from Merck, support fees for attendance at educational events and conferences for Merck, Ferring, Bessins and Gedeon Richter, payments for participation on a Merck Safety or Advisory Board, Chair of the British Fertility Society and payments for an advisory role to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. G.S. reports travel and accommodation fees for attendance at a health economic advisory board from Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. N.R.-F. reports shares in Nurture Fertility. Other authors' competing interests: none declared. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN: 61225414. TRIAL REGISTRATION DATE: 29 December 2015. DATE OF FIRST PATIENT’S ENROLMENT: 16 February 2016.
Text
HUMREP-21-1022.R2-edit-HFS AM
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 13 December 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 January 2022
Published date: 1 March 2022
Additional Information:
Funding
This study was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment (HTA) programme (13/115/82). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. The sponsors and funders of the study had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation or writing of the report. The corresponding author had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. The trial was registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Register (ISRCTN61225414) as was conducted as per published protocol (Maheshwari et al., 2019). This report presents independent research commissioned by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). The views and opinions expressed by authors in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the NHS, the NIHR, NETSCC, the NIHR HTA programme or the Department of Health.
Keywords:
IVF / frozen embryo transfer / freeze all / healthy baby / cost-effectiveness / fresh embryo transfer / infertility / willingness to pay
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 455574
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455574
ISSN: 1460-2350
PURE UUID: 2a9d84dd-257d-43b5-ad21-1a16b56ea92f
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 28 Mar 2022 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:06
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Abha Maheshwari
Author:
Jennifer L Bell
Author:
Priya Bhide
Author:
Daniel Brison
Author:
Tim Child
Author:
Huey Yi Chong
Author:
Christina Cole
Author:
Arri Coomarasamy
Author:
Rachel Cutting
Author:
Pollyanna Hardy
Author:
Haitham Hamoda
Author:
Edmund Juszczak
Author:
Yacoub Khalaf
Author:
Jennifer J Kurinczuk
Author:
Stuart Lavery
Author:
Louise Linsell
Author:
Nick Macklon
Author:
Raj Mathur
Author:
Jyotsna Pundir
Author:
Nick Raine-Fenning
Author:
Madhurima Rajkohwa
Author:
Graham Scotland
Author:
Kayleigh Stanbury
Author:
Stephen Troup
Author:
Siladitya Bhattacharya
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics