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Assisted reproductive technologies at the nexus of fertility treatment and disease prevention

Mary Herbert, Meenakshi Choudhary, Deirdre Zander‐Fox

2023Science27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Assisted reproductive technology (ART) refers to processing gametes in vitro and usually involves in vitro fertilization. Originally developed for the treatment of infertility, culture of human embryos in vitro also provides an opportunity to screen embryos for inherited genetic disorders of the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes. Progress in identifying causative genetic variants has massively increased the scope of preimplantation genetic testing in preventing genetic disorders. However, because ART procedures are not without risk of adverse maternal and child outcomes, careful consideration of the balance of risks and benefits is warranted. Further research on early human development will help to minimize risks while maximizing the benefits of ART.

Topics & Concepts

InfertilityIn vitro fertilisationAssisted reproductive technologyFertilityBiologyScope (computer science)Reproductive technologyNexus (standard)DiseaseGenetic testingHuman reproductionEmbryoBioinformaticsBiotechnologyMedicineGeneticsEnvironmental healthPregnancyComputer scienceCryopreservationInternal medicinePopulationEmbedded systemProgramming languageAssisted Reproductive Technology and Twin PregnancyPrenatal Screening and DiagnosticsReproductive Biology and Fertility
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