Study: IVF produces more boys than girls

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October 18, 2016
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Allison Sylte, KUSA
12:24 PM. MDT October 18, 2016

KUSA – A study conducted by the Colorado Center of Reproductive Medicine has found that in-vitro fertilization produces more boys than girls.

The study found that 55.3 percent of the babies born during in-vitro fertilization were male. By comparison, 51 percent of all the babies born naturally in the U.S. are boys.

For the study, CCRM researchers followed parents who underwent IVF. During the blastocyst stage, they say the embryos they examined were nearly equally divided between boys and girls.

But, when these embryos were transferred via IVF, that number skewed toward boys.

Researchers believe this ratio could be explained by impaired X-chromosome inactivation – something that only impacts female embryos.

Copyright 2016 KUSA

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About CCRM

CCRM Fertility is a global pioneer in fertility treatment, research, and science. Founded by Dr. William Schoolcraft more than 35 years ago, CCRM Fertility specializes in the most advanced fertility treatments, with deep expertise in IVF, fertility testing, egg freezing, preimplantation genetic testing, third party reproduction and egg donation. CCRM Fertility leverages its own data and a dedicated team of in-house reproductive endocrinologists, embryologists, and geneticists to deliver industry-leading outcomes. CCRM Fertility is a proud strategic partner of Unified Women’s Healthcare, which is accelerating meaningful change in women’s healthcare by building healthy, innovative, and mission-driven businesses to meet the comprehensive needs of women across the entirety of their health journey.

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