Article

Economic Evaluation of Alternative Embryo Transfer Policies in In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF)

DPhil Thesis, University of Oxford · 21(1):210-6 · 2005
Ann Thurin Kjellberg, Per Carlsson, Christina Bergh
Ann Thurin KjellbergPer CarlssonChristina Bergh

BACKGROUND: Transfer of several embryos after IVF results in a high multiple birth rate associated with increased morbidity and high costs for the neonatal care. In a previous randomized trial we demonstrated that a single embryo transfer (SET) strategy, including one fresh single embryo transfer and, if no live birth, one additional frozen-thawed SET, resulted in a live-birth rate that was not substantially lower than after double embryo transfer (DET) but markedly reduced the multiple birth rate. METHODS: We compared costs for maternal health care and productivity losses and paediatric costs for the SET and DET strategies. In addition, maternal and paediatric outcomes between the two groups were compared. RESULTS: The SET strategy resulted in lower average total costs from treatment until 6 months after delivery. There were a few more deliveries with at least one live-born child in the DET group. The incremental cost per extra delivery in the DET alternative was high, 71 940. The rates of prematurely born and low birthweight children were significantly lower with the SET strategy. There were also markedly fewer maternal and paediatric complications in the SET group. CONCLUSIONS: The SET strategy is superior to the DET strategy, when number of deliveries with at least one live-born child, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio and maternal and paediatric complications are taken into consideration. The findings do not support continuing transfers of two embryos in this group of patients.

Aimwell Signal Relevance AIMWELL EDITORIAL

This publication published in DPhil Thesis, University of Oxford represents peer-reviewed research in Adult, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Embryo Transfer directly relevant to Aimwell’s evidence intelligence infrastructure. It contributes to the FHIN network’s knowledge base on Adult and supports data-driven clinical decision making for Aimwell member organizations.

AdultCost-Benefit AnalysisEmbryo TransferFemaleFertilization in VitroHumansLive BirthMaternal Health Services

Source & Access

PubMed

Source attribution: PubMed / NCBI

Retrieved: May 21, 2026

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