Fertility woes: top 10 priorities for future research
EMB25 June 2019
People affected by fertility
problems have called for better-targeted research for a
condition that brings heartbreak to over 48 million couples
worldwide.
Their calls emerged from a large international
consultation which identified the top ten priorities for future research
across four key areas: male infertility, female and
unexplained infertility, in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and
other treatments including IVF add-ons, and the organisation
of care.
About one in seven couples seek advice at some time in their lives about difficulties in getting pregnant. Unfortunately, for up to a quarter of people, no reason can be found for their fertility problems. Success rates for different infertility treatments range from 13 to 43 percent, depending on the person’s age and the treatment.
“There’s been an escalation in research into infertility, yet many fundamental questions about the treatment of infertility remain unanswered,” says co-chair Dr James Duffy from the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford. “The frustration is that we’re drowning in research which is utterly lacking in impact.”
The project, a collaboration between the Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group, the University of Auckland, and the University of Oxford, was launched to identify the most pressing research questions as perceived by people with fertility problems, patient organisations, and professionals. More than 700 people from 52 countries participated, including more than 330 people with fertility problems and their partners.
People with fertility problems, patient organisations, and professionals suggested more than 423 different research questions, which were further prioritised in a second international survey, and finally refined to the top ten at an international consultation meeting. The results will be launched today (25 June 12:00pm GMT) at a large international meeting of fertility experts, the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology.
Co-chair Professor Cindy Farquhar, from the Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences at the University of Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand: “We expect that this list will help funders and researchers set their future priorities. The ultimate goal is infertility research with the reach and relevance to help as many people as possible in ways that are safe, timely, compassionate and effective.”
Among the top ten fertility
questions:
• Do environmental factors cause male
infertility?
• Does treating specific causes of male
infertility improve outcomes?
• Can age-related
infertility be prevented?
• What causes unexplained
infertility?
• What is the emotional and psychological
impact of repeated fertility treatment failure?
• How
can the cost of infertility treatment be reduced?
The
full list can be downloaded from here: http://tiny.cc/qhte8y
The project was funded by the Catalyst Fund, Royal Society Te Apārangi; Auckland Medical Research Fund; and Maurice and Phyllis Paykel Trust.
The full report, ‘Priority Setting
Partnership for Infertility: What should
infertility
research focus on next?’, can be downloaded
from: http://tiny.cc/qhte8y
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