Acupuncture May Improve Success
Rate of Test-Tube/ ART -IVF Pregnancies
Many couples who have difficulty conceiving a child by
traditional methods often employ various techniques to assist them in the
reproductive process. The most common assisted reproduction therapy is in vitro fertilization
(IVF), in which a woman’s eggs are
harvested and fertilized with a man’s sperm in a
laboratory. Embryos grown from the
sperm and eggs are then chose to be transferred into the
woman’s uterus. In cases where a male’s sperm count is extremely low, a
different procedure known as intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) may be
used.
Although assisted reproduction techniques like IVF and
ICSI have been in use since the 1970s, they are still something of an inexact
science. Success rates for each therapy range from as low as 1% to as high as
50%, and a successful pregnancy depends on a variety of factors, including the
age of the woman, the cause of infertility, and the skill of the technician
performing the procedure.
Two teams of researchers in Germany and the People’s
Republic of China have found that adding acupuncture to the treatment regimen
of women using assisted reproductive techniques to have a child can
dramatically improve the woman’s chances of getting pregnant. Their findings,
published in the April issue of Fertility and Sterility1 and widely reported in the popular press, could bring new hope
to thousands of couples who would like to have children but have been unable to
do so.
A total of 160 women undergoing either IVF or ICSI were
chosen for the study and randomly assigned to a control group or an acupuncture
group. The average age of the patient and the cause of infertility were
approximately the same for each group; only patients with good quality embryos
were included in the study.
After sperm and eggs were acquired, a maximum of three
embryos were transferred into each woman’s uterus using established transfer
procedures, with the same procedure used for every patient in both groups. The
examiner who performed the embryo transfers was not told which group each
patient belonged to.
Patients in both groups received hormone therapy before
and after embryo transfer to increase the odds of a successful pregnancy.
Patients in the acupuncture group also received two acupuncture sessions -
the first treatment 25 minutes before embryo transfer, the
second treatment 25 minutes after. Needles (stainless steel, 0.25 x 25
millimeters) were inserted at various point locations, with the de qi sensation
obtained during the initial insertion. After 10 minutes, the needles were
rotated to maintain de qi. The needles were left in position for a total of 25
minutes per treatment session, then removed. Needle depth varied from 10-20
millimeters depending on the region of the body being needled.
In addition to body points, the scientists used smaller
needles (0.2 x 13 mm) for auricular acupuncture at ear points 55 (shen men), 58
(zhi gong), 22 (nei fen mi) and 34 (nao dian). Two needles were inserted in the
right ear, the other two in the left ear, for a total of four needles. The
needles remained in place for 25 minutes without being manipulated; after
embryo transfer, the side of auricular acupuncture was changed.
Six weeks after the embryo transfers were performed, all
of the women were given an ultrasound examination. In the control group, the
presence of a fetal sac, the scientists’ criteria for a clinicalpregnancy, was
found in 21 women (26.3%). In the acupuncture group, the pregnancy rate was “considerably
higher” - 34 women (42.5%) were carrying a fetal sac at the time of
examination.
“Acupuncture seems to be a useful tool” for patients
looking to increase their chances of becoming pregnant following assisted
reproduction therapy, the authors concluded. They added, “As we could not
observe any significant differences in covariants between the acupuncture and
control groups, the results demonstrate that acupuncture improves pregnancy
rate.”
The researchers believe point selection played a key role
in acupuncture’s success. “We chose acupuncture points that relax the uterus
according to the principles of TCM,” they wrote, adding that because of
acupuncture’s influence on the autonomic nervous system, needling specific
points would “optimize endometrial receptivity.”
A total of nine points were used on patients in the
acupuncture group. Before embryo transfer, PC6 (nei guan), SP8 (di ji), LR3
(tai chong), GV20 (bai hui) and ST29 (gui lai) were used; after transfer, needles
were inserted at ST36 (zu san li), SP6 (san yin jiao), SP10 (xue hai) and LI4
(he gu).
Points on the spleen, stomach and colon meridians were
chosen because of their ability to provide “better blood perfusion and more
energy in the uterus”; PC6, Liv3, GV20, and ear points 34 and 55 were used to
sedate the patient; ear point 58 was used to “influence the uterus”; and ear
point 22 was stimulated to stabilize the endocrine system.
As the main objective of the study was simply to determine
whether acupuncture could increases pregnancy rate, the researchers stated that
further research must be conducted “to demonstrate precisely how acupuncture
causes physiologic changes in the uterus and the reproductive system.” One future
trial being considered will use a placebo needle to rule out any psychological
or psychosomatic effects acupuncture may produce.
Scientific Community
Embraces Results
Pregnancy and the birth of one’s child are among the most
exciting events an adult can experience. Unfortunately, for many people,
attempting to have children can be a frustrating, expensive process, which more
often results in failure than success.
“If these findings are confirmed, they may help us improve
the odds for our IVF patients’ achieving pregnancy,” commented Dr. Sandra
Carson, president-elect of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine, in a
prepared statement.2 Fertility and
Sterility is one of several journals published by the Society.
Equally impressed with the study’s outcome was Dr. Nancy
Synderman, a board-certified
surgeon/pediatrician and medical correspondent for the
popular news/talk shows Good Morning America and 20/20. In an interview with
ABCNews.com, Snyderman explained that a woman’s uterus typically undergoes
several contractions while an embryo is being transferred, which reduces the chances
of successful implantation significantly.
For years, health care professionals have theorized that
relaxing the uterus during embryo transfer could increase a woman’s chances of
becoming pregnant, but the proof of this theory has been lacking.
The Fertility and Sterility study, Snyderman feels, may have provided just the evidence the scientific community has been looking for.
“There is no doubt,
because this was a very well-done study and it was reported in a very highly regarded
medical journal, that doctors will sit up and pay attention to it,” added Dr.
Synderman. “This is the first time we may have had a serious marriage between
an art and science that is so many, many years old, and what is really
cutting-edge echnology.”3
References
1. Paulus W, et al.
Influence of acupuncture on the pregnancy rate in patients who undergo assisted
reproduction therapy. Fertility and Sterility April
2002;77(4):721-4.
2. Acupuncture may help
fertility treatment, study finds. Reuters, April 17, 2002.
3. Pins and needles.
Could acupuncture help promote pregnancy? ABCNews.com, April 16, 2002.
Available on line at:
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=125959&page=2