杏吧原创

Artificial fertility treatments create a sex bias

Fertility treatments alter the natural sex ratio, with IVF more likely to produce boys while ICSI favours girls
More boys are born after IVF
More boys are born after IVF
(Image: Howard Breman/Getty)

DIFFERENT fertility treatments affect the ratio of boy babies to girls, and this could have serious consequences as artificial fertility treatment becomes more common.

So says at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, following a study that compared different kinds of assisted fertility treatment (AFT). His team recorded the sex of all 13,368 babies born in Australia and New Zealand between 2002 and 2006 using AFT.

They compared two types of reproductive technology: IVF, which involves placing an egg on a dish with up to 1000 sperm, and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), in which sperm are injected directly into the egg 鈥 an approach used for low-quality, immotile sperm. They also compared the stage an embryo was at when transferred to the womb.

IVF raised the proportion of boys to 53 per cent, while with ICSI it fell to 50 per cent. The natural proportion of boys is 51.5 per cent.

The stage at which the embryo was transferred had the greatest effect. The later the transfer, the more likely it would result in a boy (British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, ).

Chapman suspects the culture medium that is used to grow the embryo is affecting the baby鈥檚 sex. He is working with clinics to record the type of formula used in the study period.

鈥淭he culture medium used to grow the embryo may be affecting the ratio of boys to girls鈥