Birth defects caused by IVF twice as common, study finds
Doctors at fertility clinics should routinely warn patients of the dangers, say researchers.
Scientists carried out a survey of 33 French centres collecting data on more than 15,000 births from 2003 to 2007.
The study, the largest of its kind, found evidence of a higher than expected rate of serious congenital abnormalities.
Research leader Geraldine Viot, from the Maternite Port Royal Hospital in Paris, said: âWe found a major congenital malformation in 4.24% of the children, compared with the 2-3% that we had expected from previous published studies.
âThis higher rate was due in part to an excess of heart diseases and malformations of the uro-genital system. This was much more common in boys.
âAmong the minor malformations, we found a five times higher rate of angioma, benign tumours made up of small blood vessels on or near the surface of the skin. These occurred more than twice as frequently in girls than in boys.â
Dr Viot said couples considering assisted conception should be informed about the risks without having to ask.
Most fertility doctors only told patients about the risk of birth defects if they were asked specific questions, she claimed.
âGiven that our study is the largest to date, we think that our data are more likely to be statistically representative of the true picture,â said Dr Viot.
She plans to follow up the research by investigating a further 4,000 children born in 2008, and to look at the development of IVF children who are now seven years of age.
âBy following all these children, we hope to understand more about not only what can go wrong after ART (assisted reproductive technology), but why it goes wrong,â she said.
Many of the defects are thought to be linked to âimprintingâ, the process by which certain genes are switched off or kept active according to which parent they are inherited from.
Why these problems occur is still a mystery. There could be a wide range of explanations, including infertility itself, ovarian stimulation, the maturing of eggs in the laboratory or the ICSI (intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection) technique which injects a single sperm into the egg, said Dr Viot.





