Disclaimer: This site aggregates publicly available data from official government sources (FDA, ClinicalTrials.gov, PubMed, SEC EDGAR, NMPA) for general reference only. It does NOT constitute medical advice, diagnosis, treatment recommendations, or investment advice.

Clinical Trial

Standardization of Variable Conditions of Embryo Transfer Into the Uterine Cavity in the Procedure of Medically Assisted Procreation in Humans

NCT: NCT07396181 · RECRUITING

NCT IDNCT07396181
StatusRECRUITING
Start Date2026-01-01
Completion2027-10

Brief Summary

The EFECT study is a clinical trial designed to determine whether improving the consistency of embryo transfer procedures can increase pregnancy success in patients undergoing frozen embryo transfer (cryoET). While laboratory techniques for fertilization, embryo culture, and selection have advanced significantly, the process of transferring embryos to the uterus remains variable and depends on small procedural differences, such as temperature changes, mechanical forces, timing, and individual operator techniques. These variations may affect embryo survival and implantation, ultimately influencing pregnancy outcomes. This study tests whether using specialized devices to standardize key aspects of embryo transfer-specifically temperature stability during transport and controlled, precise embryo aspiration and expulsion speed, optimal fluid volume, programmed injection time, elimination of pressure fluctuations and plunger backflow, prevention of embryo re-aspiration and detection of transfer catherer oclusion-can improve pregnancy rates. All embryos in the study are cultured using time-lapse monitoring and selected using artificial intelligence-supported grading, ensuring uniform quality for all participants. The study compares standard manual embryo transfer with transfer using one or both of the devices: Embryocase, which maintains a stable temperature during transport, and Embryopass, which standardizes the procedure and eliminates human factor. A total of 160 participants are randomly assigned to one of four groups: manual transfer without device support, manual transfer with Embryocase, transfer with Embryopass, or transfer with both devices. Participants and outcome assessors are blinded to group assignment, while the staff performing the transfer are aware due to the nature of the devices. All participants receive standard luteal phase support with progesterone following routine clinical practice. The study's main goal is to evaluate whether these procedural improvements lead to higher rates of biochemical pregnancy (positive pregnancy test) and clinical pregnancy (confirmed by ultrasound). Secondary outcomes include implantation rate, live birth rate, device safety, and ease of use as reported by staff. Pregnancy outcomes, including delivery, pregnancy loss, or ectopic pregnancy, are followed until the end of pregnancy. By investigating the impact of procedural standardization, this study aims to determine whether technological improvements during embryo transfer can increase the effectiveness of assisted reproductive treatments. If successful, the results could support the broader adoption of standardized, device-assisted embryo transfer protocols in fertility clinics, helping more patients achieve successful pregnancies.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Standardization of Variable Conditions of Embryo Transfer Into the Uterine Cavity in the Procedure of Medically Assisted Procreation in Humans?

Standardization of Variable Conditions of Embryo Transfer Into the Uterine Cavity in the Procedure of Medically Assisted Procreation in Humans is a clinical trial registered under NCT07396181. Current status: RECRUITING.

What is the status of NCT07396181?

The current status of NCT07396181 (Standardization of Variable Conditions of Embryo Transfer Into the Uterine Cavity in the Procedure of Medically Assisted Procreation in Humans) is: RECRUITING.

When did Standardization of Variable Conditions of Embryo Transfer Into the Uterine Cavity in the Procedure of Medically Assisted Procreation in Humans start?

Standardization of Variable Conditions of Embryo Transfer Into the Uterine Cavity in the Procedure of Medically Assisted Procreation in Humans started on 2026-01-01.

Official Source

View on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov API. For the most current status, refer to the official record.