BUSPH Partnership Launches Ambitious $6.6 Million Study of Fertility-Enhancing Treatments.
A partnership forged during a cab ride has resulted in a $6.6 million research collaboration that BU School of Public Health childbirth experts hope will shed light on how assisted reproductive technology influences health outcomes for women and children.
The collaboration — termed the Massachusetts Outcomes Study of Assisted Reproductive Technologies (MOSART) — dates back to 2006, when Gene Declercq, professor of community health sciences at BUSPH, and Barbara Luke, a reproductive epidemiologist at Michigan State University who is a research consultant to the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technologies (SART), were serving together on a federal review committee.
During a post-meeting cab ride back to the airport, Luke described the challenges SART faced in studying long-term health outcomes associated with in vitro fertilization.
Eugene DeclercqDeclercq was one of the founders of a Massachusetts database – dubbed PELL – that contains all Massachusetts birth certificates, fetal death and hospital discharge records since 1998. The longitudinally linked data allows researchers to follow children from birth through early childhood. SART, meanwhile, collects detailed clinical data on assisted reproduction from clinics across the country, including seven in Massachusetts.
Luke and Declercq realized that if they could merge their two datasets, it would be possible to develop the most comprehensive study of assisted-reproduction outcomes yet devised.
Now, thanks to a five-year grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Development, they are putting those pieces together. The research team — which now spans six institutions — has begun an in-depth investigation of how in vitro fertilization procedures affect health outcomes for women and children.
“It’s an extraordinary partnership that brings a lot of people, and a lot of knowledge, to the table,” Luke said.
Prior studies have shown that ART (assisted reproductive technology) increases the risk of pre-term delivery, low birth weight and birth defects, but it remains unclear whether the higher risks are fueled by the incidence of multiple pregnancies, the older average age of mothers, or infertility factors separate from the ART procedure.
“The tricky thing is, ART is bound up with a lot of other issues,” said Declercq. “We’re not just looking at a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ as to whether ART increases risk. If there are risks, we want to know what they are, what causes them — and is there something that can be done better? Maybe there are some treatments that need to be changed, or some that have fewer risks.”
Luke said being able to link the SART data with hospitalization records is a “huge step forward.”
Besides BUSPH and Michigan State, other partners include the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Dartmouth College, Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
MOSART has two parts: One will examine health outcomes of children up to age 3 who were conceived with ART; the other will look at long-term outcomes for women who gave birth through ART, compared to women who had infertility issues but did not get pregnant with ART, and women who gave birth through spontaneous conception.
Declercq said the study will break new ground because prior research has “typically lacked a comparison group of women with indicators of subfertility to determine the extent to which poorer outcomes are the result of the ART or the underlying condition which led to the subfertility.” Also, the project will cover multiple clinics, where most prior research has focused on a single clinic.
Infertility affects an estimated 12 to 15 percent of women of reproductive age. The use of in vitro fertilization and other fertility-enhancing treatments has risen steadily in the U.S., with an estimated 1 to 3 percent of births now involving ART. According to the CDC, more than 154,400 ART cycles were performed at 443 reporting clinics in the U.S. during 2010, resulting in the births of 61,561 infants.
Massachusetts, which has legislation requiring insurers to cover some of the costs associated with ART, has one of the highest rates of ART in the country — nearly 3 percent.
“Massachusetts is very progressive in its collection of vital statistics data, so it’s a very exciting project to be a part of,” Luke said. “It’s certainly bigger and more comprehensive than anything done before.”
The research is funded by grants from the National Institute of Child Health and Development.
Besides Declercq, other BUSPH researchers on the project include: Candice Belanoff, research assistant professor of community health sciences, and Howard Cabral, professor of biostatistics.
Submitted by: Lisa Chedekel
chedekel@bu.edu