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 Follow-up of children born after ICSI Van Steirteghem A; Bonduelle M; Devroey P; Liebaers IHum Reprod Update  2002[Mar]; 8 (2): 111-6The comparison of outcome of assisted reproductive technology (ART) children and  naturally conceived children may be hampered by the difference in characteristics  of the infertile patients such as age and genetic risks. Follow-up studies are  further hampered by the type of neonatal surveillance protocol, the number of  individuals lost to follow-up, the size of the cohort study, and the lack of  standardization, for example to define major anomalies. The limited available  data on ICSI fetal karyotypes reveal that, in comparison with a general neonatal  population, there is: (i) a slight but significant increase in de-novo sex  chromosomal aneuploidy (0.6% instead of 0.2%) and structural autosomal  abnormalities (0.4% instead of 0.07%); and (ii) an increased number of inherited  (mostly from the infertile father) structural aberrations. Available data  indicate that in 8319 liveborn ICSI children, the mean percentage who do not  originate from singleton pregnancies was 40% (range 32.6-60.8% according to  centre). Most multiples are twins, but there are also 4.4% triplets (in one  survey 13.2%). This substantial increase in multiple pregnancies must be  considered the most important complication of ART. The different percentages of  major and minor congenital malformations cannot be compared, but overall the data  in large and reliable surveys does not indicate a higher rate of malformations in  ICSI children than in naturally conceived children. To date, only three studies  have examined the medical and developmental outcome of ICSI children at 1 and 2  years. These do not reveal obvious problems, but in future further comparison of  matched cohorts of children and case-control studies are needed before final  conclusions can be drawn.|*Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic[MESH]|Aneuploidy[MESH]|Chromosome Aberrations[MESH]|Congenital Abnormalities/epidemiology[MESH]|Female[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Infant, Newborn[MESH]|Infertility/genetics[MESH]|Pregnancy[MESH]|Pregnancy, Multiple[MESH]|Prenatal Diagnosis[MESH]|Sex Chromosome Aberrations[MESH]|Treatment Outcome[MESH]
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