Primal Health Databank: Study

Entry No:1000
Title:Assisted reproduction and child neurodevelopmental outcomes: a systematic review.
Author(s):Bay B, Mortensen PB, Kesmodel US
Reference:Fertil Steril. 2013 Sep;100(3):844-53. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2013.05.034. Epub 2013 Jun 28.
Place of Study:Denmark
Abstract:Children born after medically assisted reproduction vs. reference groups of spontaneously conceived children. Data were reviewed from worldwide published articles, without restrictions as to publication year or language. A total of 79 valuable studies were selected among a total of 750 articles. They included between 31 and 2,446,044 children. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Child neurodevelopmental outcomes categorized as cognitive, behavioral, emotional or psychomotor development, or diagnoses of mental disorders. RESULT(S): For infants, studies on psychomotor development showed no deficits, but few investigated cognitive or behavioral development. Studies on toddlers generally reported normal cognitive, behavioral, socio-emotional, and psychomotor development. For children in middle childhood, development seems comparable in children born after assisted reproduction and controls, although fewer studies have been conducted with follow-up to this age. Very few studies have assessed neurodevelopmental outcomes among teens, and the results are inconclusive. Studies investigating the risk of diagnoses of mental disorders are generally large, with long follow-up, but the results are inconsistent. CONCLUSION(S): It may tentatively be concluded that the neurodevelopment of children born after fertility treatment is overall comparable to that in children born after spontaneous conception.
Keyword(s):IVF, medicalised conception, medically assisted fecundation, neuro-development, neuro-intellectual development, neurodevelopment, neurological development
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