Unraveling the biologic and social predictors of infant sex among assisted reproductive technology cycles in the United States
As assisted reproductive technology (ART) has evolved over the past decades, there has been an increase in the use of ART worldwide, as well as the use of different techniques, including intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), extended culture, and preimplantation genetic testing (PGT). In this issue of Fertility and Sterility, Narvaez et al. provide an important update on how the use of ART in the United States and the practices specific to ART may be altering the sex ratio (1). She and her coauthors used data from the Centers for Disease Control National Assisted Reproductive Technology Surveillance System (NASS) to assess trends and characteristics associated with a male-biased sex ratio in live-born infants among all ART cycles from 2006 to 2014.
Source: fertstert.org
Unraveling the biologic and social predictors of infant sex among assisted reproductive technology cycles in the United States
More from Embryology and Reproductive MedicineMore posts in Embryology and Reproductive Medicine »
- Life after Stillbirth
- The possible impact of COVID 19 on fertility and ART
- Human embryonic stem cell–derived blastocyst-like spheroids resemble human trophectoderm during early implantation process
- What support is available for you in hospital if you lose your baby
- Estrogen receptor-α immunoreactivity predicts symptom severity and pain recurrence in deep endometriosis
Be First to Comment