Search Immortality Topics:



The association between severe obesity and characteristics of failed fertilized oocytes

Posted: October 21, 2012 at 7:44 am

STUDY QUESTION

Is the cytoskeletal and chromosomal organization of failed fertilized oocytes from severely obese patients (BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2) altered compared with that in patients with normal BMI (BMI 18.5–24.9 kg/m2)?

SUMMARY ANSWER

Compared with normal BMI patients, severe obesity was associated with a greater prevalence of spindle anomalies and non-aligned chromosomes in failed fertilized oocytes.

WHAT IS KNOWN AND WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS

Obesity is associated with poor reproductive outcomes, but little is known regarding the underlying mechanisms. To address potential mechanisms, our study compared the cytoskeletal and chromosome organization in failed fertilized oocytes from severely obese and normal BMI patients.

DESIGN

The study population was drawn from IVF patients treated in a hospital-based infertility clinic between February 2010 and July 2011. The prevalence of meiotic spindle and chromosome alignment anomalies in failed fertilized oocytes from patients with severe obesity (i.e. Class II and III; BMI 35.0–50.1 kg/m2) was compared with those from patients with normal BMI (BMI 18.5–24.9 kg/m2). Oocytes were fixed and then labeled for tubulin, actin and chromatin. Spindle number and integrity, as well as chromosome alignment, were assessed using immunofluorescence microscopy and, in some cases, confocal microscopy. Generalized estimating equations were applied, which account for the correlation among oocytes from the same patient to estimate odds ratio (OR), 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and two-sided Wald P-values. Models were adjusted for continuous age at cycle start, cycle type (IVF or ICSI) and polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) a priori.

PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING

University-affiliated infertility clinic. A total of 276 oocytes that failed to fertilize from 137 patients were evaluated: 105 oocytes from severely obese women (n = 47) and 171 oocytes from normal BMI patients (n = 90).

MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE

(i) Significantly more oocytes from the severely obese group exhibited two spindles compared with those from the normal BMI group (58.9 versus 35.1%; OR = 2.68, CI = 1.39–5.15, P-value = 0.003).

(ii) Among oocytes with a single spindle, those from severely obese patients showed a significantly higher prevalence of disarranged spindles with non-aligned chromosomes compared with those from normal BMI patients (28.6 versus 8.6%; OR = 4.58, CI = 1.05–19.86, P-value = 0.04).

BIAS, CONFOUNDING AND OTHER REASONS FOR CAUTION

Inclusion of only failed fertilized oocytes, small sample size, unknown factors such as non-PCOS comorbidity.

GENERALIZABILITY TO OTHER POPULATIONS

For this study, by design, it is unclear whether the findings are generalizable to successfully fertilized oocytes, and whether this oocyte-level influence of obesity is generalizable to infertile women who do not undergo stimulation or, more broadly, to spontaneous conceptions in fertile women.

STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S)

none.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER

n/a.

Source:
http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/27/11/3198?rss=1

Recommendation and review posted by G. Smith