Embryo Culture Duration Is an Independent Risk Factor for Gestational Diabetes in Frozen Embryo Transfer Pregnancies
Huijun Chen, Shujuan Ma, Yvonne Liu, Yifan Gu, Fei Gong, Philipp Kalk, Carl-Friedrich Hocher, Ge Lin, Berthold Hocher

TL;DR
Leaving embryos in culture longer before freezing increases the risk of gestational diabetes in pregnancies.
Contribution
This study identifies prolonged embryo culture as an independent risk factor for gestational diabetes in frozen embryo transfer pregnancies.
Findings
Blastocyst-stage transfers had higher gestational diabetes rates than cleavage-stage transfers.
Prolonged embryo culture remained a significant risk factor after adjusting for maternal factors.
Combining blastocyst transfer with maternal metabolic risk factors further increased gestational diabetes incidence.
Abstract
To investigate whether prolonged embryo culture increases the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) in pregnancies conceived via frozen embryo transfer (FET). In this retrospective cohort study, 26 100 FET pregnancies from 2018 to 2022 were analyzed. GDM was diagnosed by a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test. Embryo culture duration (day 3 vs day 5 vs day 6) and morphology were evaluated. Multivariable logistic regression adjusted for maternal age, body mass index, and fasting glucose. Interaction analyses assessed the combined effect of blastocyst transfer and maternal metabolic risk factors. GDM occurred in 14.0% of pregnancies. Blastocyst-stage transfers were associated with a significantly higher GDM risk than cleavage-stage transfers (day 3: 15.1%; day 5: 17.4%; day 6: 18.2%; P = .01). Prolonged embryo culture remained an independent risk factor in adjusted models (odds ratio,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGestational Diabetes Research and Management · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies · Maternal and fetal healthcare
