DutchNews.nl,
Saturday 14 June 2014
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| (Volkskrant) |
The test
can spare many women unnecessary and costly ivf treatment, says researcher Dik
Kok and fertility professor Joop Laven in Saturday’s Volkskrant.
The test
involves looking for four bacteria in urine ahead of ivf treatment. Women who
fail to become pregnant have a very specific volume of the bacteria in their
urine which is completely different from those who do become pregnant. This
bacteria shows how receptive the womb is likely to be to the embryo, the
researchers say.
Expensive
Every year
in the Netherlands, some 9,000 women undergo ivf treatment in which an egg is
fertilized and then placed back in the womb. Many undergo several treatments
and the annual cost is some €48m.
But just
one third of the women treated with ivf go on to become mothers. Kok and Laven
estimate their urine test can exclude 2,600 women a year because the conditions
in their wombs cannot sustain an embryo. They estimate this will cut €12m from
the fertility treatment bill.
The test
has been trialed on 80 women so far. Gynaecologists say the results are
interesting but more research on a larger group is needed. The researchers are
currently being funded to run trials involving several hundred women at
different fertility clinics.

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