RecruitingPhase 3NCT06746129

Cleavage-stage Versus Blastocyst-stage Embryo Transfer in IVF Patients With Few Embryos

Day 3 Versus Day 5 Embryo Transfer in IVF Patients With Few Embryos


Sponsor

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Enrollment

1,126 participants

Start Date

Sep 10, 2025

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Infertility affects more than 6 million women the United States and is a major life event that results in a wide range of socio-cultural, emotional, physical and financial problems. The most successful treatment for infertility, in-vitro fertilization (IVF), fertilizes a woman's eggs with her partner's sperm in a culture dish and transfers the resulting embryos into the uterus. Most of the time, prior to being transferred, embryos are grown in the dish for 5-7 days after which some of them reach an advanced stage (blastocyst stage). This has several advantages such as a lower chance of a multiple pregnancies (twins, triplets etc.) after transfer and fewer transfer procedures. However, it is possible that embryos would survive better if transferred into the uterus at the 8-cell stage after growing them for only 3 days. Thus, when patients only have a small number of embryos they and their physicians face the difficult choice when to transfer because there are currently no studies available to guide this decision. This randomized controlled trial is comparing pregnancy outcomes and patient satisfaction of poor prognosis patients with 5 or fewer embryos undergoing either transfer of an advanced (blastocyst) or an 8-cell embryo. This study will provide the data for the development of guidelines for IVF providers to make evidence-based decisions when to transfer embryos in poor prognosis IVF patients, reduce patients' anxiety regarding cycle cancellation and improve patient counseling, which will increase patients' ability to participate in the development of their treatment plan.


Eligibility

Sex: FEMALEMin Age: 18 YearsMax Age: 44 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study compares two approaches in IVF for people with few embryos: transferring embryos at the cleavage stage (day 2–3 of development) versus the blastocyst stage (day 5–6), to determine which method leads to better success rates for people in this specific situation. **You may be eligible if...** - This is your first autologous (using your own eggs) IVF cycle - You had 5 or fewer fertilized eggs (zygotes) on day 1 - You are planning a fresh embryo transfer **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You are planning genetic testing of embryos (PGT) - You have had 3 or more miscarriages (recurrent pregnancy loss) - Your BMI is over 40 - You have a uterine condition affecting fertility - Your uterine lining was less than 6 mm on the day of trigger injection - There were problems with fertilization timing or sperm collection (such as surgical sperm retrieval) Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

PROCEDUREembryo transfer

transfer of embryo(s) into the uterine cavity


Locations(1)

Boston IVF

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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NCT06746129


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