4.5 Article

Obesity and oocyte quality: significant implications for ART and emerging mechanistic insights

期刊

BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION
卷 106, 期 2, 页码 338-350

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/biolre/ioab228

关键词

obesity; women's health; oocyte; oocyte quality; ART; IVF; ICSI; reproductive success

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Obesity has a negative impact on fertility, especially in women of reproductive age. It increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and other noncommunicable diseases. Obesity affects female physiology in multiple ways, leading to abnormal ovarian function. In assisted reproductive technology, obese women have lower success rates and higher risks of miscarriage, pregnancy complications, and neonatal death. Obesity may affect fertility outcomes through defects in oocyte quality, abnormal embryo development, and an unaccommodating uterine environment.
The prevalence of obesity in adults worldwide, and specifically in women of reproductive age, is concerning given the risks to fertility posed by the increased risk of type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and other noncommunicable diseases. Obesity has a multi-systemic impact in female physiology that is characterized by the presence of oxidative stress, lipotoxicity, and the activation of pro-inflammatory pathways, inducing tissue-specific insulin resistance and ultimately conducive to abnormal ovarian function. A higher body mass is linked to Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, dysregulated menstrual cycles, anovulation, and longer time to pregnancy, even in ovulatory women. In the context of assisted reproductive technology (ART), compared to women of normal body mass index, obese women have worse outcomes in every step of their journey, resulting in reduced success measured as live birth rate. Even after pregnancy is achieved, obese women have a higher chance of miscarriage, gestational diabetes, pregnancy complications, birth defects, and most worryingly, a higher risk of stillbirth and neonatal death. The potential for compounding effects of ART on pregnancy complications and infant morbidities in obese women has not been studied. There is still much debate in the field on whether these poorer outcomes are mainly driven by defects in oocyte quality, abnormal embryo development, or an unaccommodating uterine environment, however the clinical evidence to date suggests a combination of all three are responsible. Animal models of maternal obesity shed light on the mechanisms underlying the effects of obesity on the peri-conception environment, with recent findings pointing to lipotoxicity in the ovarian environment as a key driver of defects in oocytes that have not only reduced developmental competence but long-lasting effects in offspring health.

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