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Age
and Infertility
Expectations When Your Expecting in Your Forties and Fifties
Robert
Boostanfar, MD, FACOG Board Certified, Reproductive Endocrinologist
There has been a complete
paradigm shift in obstetrical care for women in the
21st century. As more women are seeking advanced reproductive
techniques, such as IVF,
to assist in achieving a pregnancy, the ceiling of reproduction
has been lifted such that almost any healthy women in
her forties and fifties can successfully mother a child. Older women wishing to have children should not delay consulting a fertility specialist.
In a recent study,
we reviewed the pregnancies of 77 post menopausal women
with an average age of 53 years who underwent an in-vitro
fertilization procedure with the assistance of egg
donation (RJP, Boostanfar et al., Journal of the
American Medical Association 2002; 288: 2320-2323).
This 10-year study is the largest series in the worlds
scientific literature of reported pregnancy outcomes
among women in their sixth decade of life. This database
will likely serve as a counseling tool to guide physicians
and patients to know what to expect in their fifties.
Although outcomes have been extremely favorable, there
are serious medical conditions that can evolve or become
exacerbated during pregnancy. Therefore, it has become
imperative to understand the physiological changes during
this time period and to be prepared and watchful of
possible complications.
A proportion of women
in their early forties are successful in becoming pregnant
with their own eggs spontaneously, many others are able
to conceive in cooperation with an egg donor.Although
the likelihood of becoming pregnant is significantly
higher when enrolled in an egg door program, pregnancy course and birth outcomes are extremely
similar whether a woman is able to conceive with her
own eggs or with an egg donor. That is, whether or not
the pregnancy is a result of a natural conception, a
conception with her own eggs and assistance from advanced
reproductive techniques like IVF
or with the assistance of egg donation, she is likely
to have similar risks and outcomes throughout the duration
of her pregnancy. The most notable risk factor is not
how the pregnancy was conceived but perhaps the age
in which a woman achieves a pregnancy.
Pressing the boundaries
of reproduction in women of advanced
reproductive age can be complicated by underlying
medical conditions that are undiagnosed. Such factors,
like a decrease in the reserve of the cardiovascular
system and the diminished ability to adapt to physical
stress both may accompany advancing age and may combine
to increase risks to the mother and the baby. Some authors
have suggested that advanced maternal age, defined as
greater than age 35 by some authors and greater than
age 40 by others, is associated with an increased risk
of poor pregnancy outcome (Lehman et al., American Journal
of Obstetrics and Gynecology 1987; 157: 738-742). These
reports may be confounded by inconsistencies in prenatal
care, preexisting medical conditions and access to appropriate
health care. In contrast, when women of advanced maternal
age were followed and delivered in a sophisticated,
high risk care medical center, no increase in adverse
outcome was noted (Kirz et al. American Journal of Obstetrics
and Gynecology 1985; 152: 7-12).
All in all, women in
their forties and fifties should expect to have some
mild increase in pregnancy related issues. However,
carefully selected and monitored women should anticipate
a successful result. We recommend that all women in
this age group see a Reproductive Endocrinologist for
a history and physical exam. She should also undergo
an EKG, a chest X-Ray, mammogram, PAP smear and blood
work as part of her preconceptional evaluation. When
the assessment is completed, women can be counseled
suitably as to what their potential risks may be.
Appropriately screened,
healthy women in their fifties, who carry a singleton
pregnancy, can expect their gestation to go practically
full term and deliver babies that are approximately
the same weight as their counterparts half their age
(RJP, Boostanfar et al., Journal of the American Medical
Association 2002; 288: 2320-2323). Nevertheless, these
women are also approximately three times more likely
to deliver by cesarean section, three to ten times more
likely to experience pregnancy induced hypertension
and two to five times more likely to encounter diabetes
compared to younger women. Although there does not appear
to be any medical reason for excluding these women from
attempting to become pregnant on the basis of age alone,
it is recommended they seek the attention of a Reproductive
Endocrinologist who is aware of these complexities,
in order that they may be thoroughly screened and deemed
as an appropriate candidate to experience a favorable
outcome. 
Finally, the
careful, deliberate and judicious transfer of embryos
should be taken into consideration among patients undergoing
an egg
donation cycle. Because of the significantly higher
implantation rates of donor eggs and embryos, couples
attempting to conceive with the assistance of an egg
donor are at a particularly high risk of multiple gestations.
Moreover, it has become exceedingly evident that multiple
gestations may, in turn, further complicate the course
of a pregnancy. Those complications include higher rates
of morning sickness, preterm labor and preterm birth
and increased rates of pregnancy induced hypertension
or toxemia. The introduction of modern extended embryo
culture, preimplantation genetic diagnosis, PGD,
and blastocyst transfer have resulted in a conscientious
and concerted effort to increase pregnancy and implantation
rates, while simultaneously minimizing the number of
embryos transferred to one or two per cycle in a realistic
attempt to reduce the number of high order multiple
pregnancies. It is of critical importance to choose
infertility centers, and subsequently obstetricians,
with both significant clinical and laboratory expertise
in this domain of reproductive medicine.
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