Maternal exposure to fine particulate matter and pregnancy outcomes in women undergoing in vitro fertilization: A multicenter retrospective study
Miaoxin Chen, Ying Fang, Yunxiu Li, Guimin Hao, Xueqing Wu, Yan Sun, Jichun Tan, Yue Niu, Xinyi Du, Yonggang Li, Zhuoye Luo, Fen Hu, Yuehong Li, Shanshan Wu, Yingying Yang, Orhan Bukulmez, Yeung William Shu-Biu, Robert J. Norman, Haidong Kan, Xiaoming Teng

TL;DR
This study finds that high exposure to fine particulate matter during key stages of IVF treatment is linked to lower live birth rates and increased implantation failure.
Contribution
The study identifies critical exposure windows and vulnerable subgroups in IVF patients affected by PM2.5 exposure.
Findings
High PM2.5 exposure during follicle growth stages is significantly associated with decreased live birth rates.
PM2.5 exposure primarily affects early pregnancy stages, leading to implantation failure.
Women with poor ovarian response or embryo quality are more sensitive to PM2.5 exposure.
Abstract
Few large-scale studies have systematically examined the effects of maternal exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) on live birth in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF). This study aimed to investigate the associations between ambient PM2.5 exposure and live birth in women treated with IVF, and determine critical periods, key failure events, and vulnerable populations affected by such exposure. We included 58,637 patients from six reproductive centers in China between 2016 and 2021. We defined six exposure windows and adopted logistic regression with random-effect models to investigate the associations between PM2.5 exposure and live birth. We further categorized live birth failure as implantation failure, biochemical pregnancy loss, and miscarriage, to determine at which stage PM2.5 exposure caused the live birth failure. Subgroup analyses were conducted by female age,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAir Quality and Health Impacts · Climate Change and Health Impacts · Energy and Environment Impacts
