Celebrating 30 years of ART in Latin America; and the 2018 report

JBRA Assist Reprod. 2021 Oct 4;25(4):617-639. doi: 10.5935/1518-0557.20210055.

Abstract

Objective: What are the trends in patient characteristics, effectiveness and safety of assisted reproductive technology (ART) performed in Latin America over the past three decades, as well as the detailed outcomes of procedures initiated in 2018?.

Design: Retrospective collection of multinational data including epidemiology and outcomes of ART performed between 1990 and 2018.

Results: Over these 30 years we report 955,117 initiated cycles, 191,191 deliveries and 238,045 live births. In 1990, 66.5% of women were ≤34 years and 8.7% ≥40 years; in 2018, 26.4% of women were ≤34 years and 32.0% were ≥40 years. In 1990, 60.4% of transfers included ≥3 embryos, falling to 13.5% in 2018, and single embryo transfer (SET) increased from 13.8% to 30.4% between 1990 and 2018. Delivery rate per fresh transfer increased from approximately 17% in the 1990s to 25% in 2018, with a meaningful drop in high-order multiples, from 5-9% in the 1990s to 0.4% in 2018. This drop is associated with increasing use of frozen embryo transfer (FET) (57% in 2018) compared with 10% in 2000. In 2018, delivery rate in FET was 28.3%, reaching 31.2% in freeze-all cycles; and the cumulative live birth rate (fresh + FET) was 41.9%. Elective SET also increased, from 0.9% in 2010 to 10% in 2018. The delivery rate in elective SET (31.7%) was only 5.4% lower than elective double embryo transfer (DET) (37.1%); however, multiple births increased from 2.1% to 25.5% twins and 0.4% triplets in elective DET.

Conclusions: The Latin American Registry of Assisted Reproduction (RLA) celebrates 30 years of voluntary reporting from a total of nearly 200 centres in 15 countries. This South-South Cooperation network has proven to be an efficient and safe system for technological transfer and regional growth.

Keywords: 30 years' trend analysis; Latin American Registry of ART; efficacy and perinatal outcome; safety.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Female
  • Humans
  • Latin America / epidemiology
  • Pregnancy
  • Pregnancy Outcome* / epidemiology
  • Pregnancy, Multiple
  • Reproductive Techniques, Assisted*
  • Retrospective Studies