Clinical Research at PFC
Progress has been steady at the Center this week. From last Sunday up until this coming Saturday we will do 13 egg retrievals, 14 fresh embryo transfers, 6 frozen embryo transfers and one hysteroscopy. It looks to be a fairly typical week.
Last Saturday I attended an investigators’ meeting, along with our lab director, Dr. Joe Conaghan, for a new clinical research study that we may be undertaking with Gene Security Network (GSN). GSN is one of the pre-implantation genetic diagnosis/screening (PGD/PGS) laboratories with which we work. I really can’t discuss the details of the study at this time, as we have signed a standard non-disclosure agreement with GSN, but this will be a big study to investigate how useful PGS will be to the average IVF patient.
This leads me to the topic of today’s blog: clinical research. Although PFC is not an academic institution, we are still interested in research because this is how the field of reproductive medicine advances. In fact, since there are so many private IVF clinics, much of the research on IVF is currently being done in the private sector. We would not have the field of assisted reproduction today if it were not for clinical research and for the thousands of patients who have participated in this research to this point. I’d like our readers to know that participation in research is not taken lightly by anyone conducting the studies. As investigators, we all have to be trained in the ethical conduct of research, to make sure the risks of participation are minimized and that there is potential benefit to patients from participation. Our number one goal is still to get our patients a healthy pregnancy. We will not compromise that goal for the sake of a clinical study. The study protocols are carefully reviewed by an independent Institutional Review Board (IRB), tasked with ensuring there is no harm or undue coercion to participants. In most good studies, the design of the study includes a “control arm” and the patients who are randomized into this arm receive current standard treatment. The patients randomized to the “treatment arm” receive the treatment under investigation. It is very important that the patients in the treatment arm should be expected to be at least as successful, if not more so, than the patients in the control arm.
This year, PFC is participating in at least 4 clinical studies. Some, like our acupuncture study, are designed by PFC and are only being done at our facility. Some, like the GSN study, are being designed by the company and will be done at multiple IVF centers, then GSN will pool the data. If you are interested, please let us know. I will be posting more details very soon to our PFC website.
UPDATE: Research web page is live
Tags: Clinical Trials & Studies, PGS - Preimplantation Genetic Screening











