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Go Get Some Sun: Live Birth Rates Are Higher for Donor Egg ART in Sunnier Climates

October 23 , 2012
by: ASRM Office of Public Affairs
Published in ASRM Press Release

Note: All information is embargoed until the time of presentation at the meeting, unless otherwise indicated.

HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE 68th ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE

Embargoed for Release: Monday, October 22, 2012 – 5:15 PM   Pacific Daylight Time

Go Get Some Sun:  Live Birth Rates Are Higher for Donor Egg ART in Sunnier Climates

San Diego, CA - At the 68th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, a bicoastal research team will report evidence that sunlight exposure may have an effect on the success of ART cycles using donor eggs.   

Although the role of vitamin D deficiency in human reproductive competence is not yet clear, it has been observed that Vitamin D deficiency may compromise procreation in animals. In humans, exposure to solar UVB radiation is a major source of endogenous vitamin D, and greater sun exposure results in higher physiologic levels.  

Hypothesizing that a population’s exposure to sunlight (as a surrogate for its vitamin D level) could correlate with its reproductive success, Dr. Pal and colleagues analyzed year 2007 data from  444 SART-reporting clinics which were located using global coordinates.  Relationships between clinics’ location coordinates and live births following fresh and frozen donor egg cycles were determined.  Adjusting for the number of embryos transferred, live birth rates for donor egg ART cycles were significantly higher at clinics in the Southwestern United States, the region with highest UVB exposure, compared to those in the Northeast, with the US’s lowest exposure to UVB.

Glenn Schattman, MD, President of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology, noted, “This study shows a possible environmental influence on reproductive health that is under our control.  We certainly know that lifestyle modifications like maintaining ideal body weight, exercise and a healthy diet may improve the success of treatment and health of the children. Physicians can also advise their patients to get sufficient vitamin D through diet, supplements, or by safely increasing their exposure to sunlight.”

O-105 Relevance of “Scots’ Paradox” for Reproductive Biology?
L. Pal et al


The American Society for Reproductive Medicine, founded in 1944, is an organization of more than 7,000 physicians, researchers, nurses, technicians and other professionals dedicated to advancing knowledge and expertise in reproductive biology.  Affiliated societies include the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology, the Society for Male Reproduction and Urology, the Society for Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, the Society of Reproductive Surgeons and the Society of Reproductive Biologists and Technologists.

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