Babies conceived with assisted reproductive technology (ART)
may be two to four times more likely to have certain birth defects (heart wall
problems, gastrointestinal disorders, cleft lip/palate) than babies conceived
naturally, according to a report published in the advance online edition of
Human Reproduction.
“Today, more than 1% of infants are conceived through ART and this number may continue to increase. While the risk is low, it is still important for parents who are considering using ART to think about all of the potential risks and benefits of this technology,” said epidemiologist Jennita Reefhuis, PhD, of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lead author of the report.
ART refers to any procedure that involves surgically removing eggs from a
woman’s womb, combining them with sperm in the laboratory, and returning them
to the woman’s body or donating them to another woman. The procedure has been
used in the
For the study, Reefhuis and colleagues reviewed data from
mothers of about 13,500 babies born with birth defects and mothers of more than
5,000 babies without birth defects. The study included only 281 women who had
fertility procedures. The babies were born from October 1997- December 2003 in
10 states including
Analyzing the babies conceived through ART, Reefhuis and
colleagues found that there was twice the risk of heart defects, more than
twice the risk of cleft lip and more than four times the risk of
gastrointestinal defects when compared with babies conceived without fertility
treatments. One example: the risk of a baby in the US being born with a cleft
lip with or without a palate is above 1 in 950, but the study found that the
risk is 1 in 425 for babies conceived through infertility treatments. Given the
figures, the risk of a birth defect remains low, the researchers noted.
However, it’s important for couples to be aware that thee may be some
increased risk for birth defects as well, Reefhuis said.
The study did not evaluate artificial insemination or
hormone treatments. Reefhuis also said that although her study linked fertility
procedures to birth defects, it did not prove the connection or explain it. If
the connection is real, it is not known whether the procedures increase the
risk for birth defects, or whether infertility itself raises the risk.
Other researchers welcomed the findings although they said
more research was needed to confirm them.
“The results are concerning, but with this small a sample of
patients, a bigger study would need to be done. And the fact that they see it
in singletons, not in twins, makes it hard for me to think this is a direct
relationship,” Dr. James A. Grifo, director of the fertility clinic at