Mark Henderson, Science Editor
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Better NHS funding of fertility treatment will be crucial to the prevention of hazardous twin and triplet births, the IVF watchdog said yesterday as it announced a national strategy to reduce rates of multiple pregnancies.
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) expects clinics to cut the proportion of twin and triplet pregnancies from one in four to one in ten over three years. Multiple births are the biggest health risk in IVF.
Instead of backing the target with the threat of restrictions on the transfer of multiple embryos, the regulator has chosen a voluntary approach by which professional groups will draw up guidelines on how it should be achieved. It called on the Government to pay for more free cycles of treatment to make the plan work.
Walter Merricks, the interim chairman of the HFEA, has written to Dawn Primarolo, the Health Minister, to press the case for better access. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence recommends that three cycles of IVF should be offered to women under 40, yet the Government asks primary care trusts to offer just one and many have imposed restrictions on which patients qualify.
Mr Merricks said: “We always have in mind that still the greatest risk in the eyes of patients is the risk of not having a baby.” Increased NHS funding for IVF was the key, he said: “Women with access to only one funded cycle of treatment are only acting rationally if they beg for a double embryo transfer in their single chance of becoming pregnant. The risk of a twin pregnancy seems nothing to the risk of no pregnancy.”
His comments were backed by Professor Peter Braude, of King’s College London, who led an expert panel that advised the HFEA on reducing multiple births. “It is important that there should be some comeback from the Department of Health to include frozen cycles or pay for at least two cycles for all patients,” he said.
To achieve the 10 per cent target, about 50 per cent of women having IVF, most of them first-time patients under 35, would have just one embryo transferred at a time. Currently only about 10 per cent have a single embryo transfer.
Twins and triplets are much more likely to be stillborn, to die in the first week of life, to be disabled or to be born prematurely than a single baby. Mothers also have a greater risk of life-threatening conditions such as pre-eclampsia and heart attacks. The HFEA estimates that 126 IVF babies who died in 2003 would have survived had they been single births.
Modern techniques mean that success rates with one embryo can be just as good as with two for young women with a good prognosis, but only if a back-up cycle of treatment with a frozen embryo is offered. Very few NHS trusts provide this and about 75 per cent of IVF patients pay for their own treatment.
IVF treatment accounts for only 1.2 per cent of all births, but for nearly 20 per cent of multiple births. Although the HFEA has already restricted embryo transfers to a maximum of two for most patients, the latest data show a slight increase in multiple births from 2004 to 2005.
Mark Hamilton, the chairman of the British Fertility Society, agreed that better NHS provision would be critical to reversing this trend and backed the HFEA’s voluntary approach.

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Prof Linda Eckert (et al) wrote a study on improving IVF birth rates through controlling a common vaginal bacterial infection prior to IVF.
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Erik Henau, Bedford, UK
Well said Helen. Im sure Judy with her 2.4 children feels very smug and that she has the moral highround. Does she like knowing her taxes also pay for women who come here just to give birth and then go home again, its called NHS tourism. Is cancer causd by smoking or liver transplants due to alcohol abuse more of an urgent medical condition? I suggest judy talks to some couples who cannot have children before she is so quick to judge.
Melusine, London, UK
Judy, I am sure you do object to having your taxes spent on this. And I bet you have children and had no problem conceiving either. Infertility is a recognised medical condition ( just ask any doctor) - it is probably the most distressing experience a couple who want children can go through. It has been proven that the stress associated with it is as high as that linked with having cancer or being bereaved. And IVF is a last resort, you don't do it unless absolutely everything else has failed.
Have you also considered the fact that your taxes are being spent on housing single teenage mothers that can't be bothered to use contraception or say no ?
Helen, Cheshire,
There's high time to educate sub-fertile women on the alternatives or preparations one can undertake before going through IVF, which is a highly invasive treatment. Nutrition, acupuncture and herbs are some of the things available and effective. A lot of women who can't conceive are stressed out, frequently under weight (social pressures here we go!) or have complications such as fibroids etc. There are of course many reasons, but in my opinion, try the safe, healthy option first...
Beth, London,
The NHS shouldn't be funding fertility treatment at all. Childlessness is not a medical condition. I object to my taxes being spent on this.
Judy , Liverpool, england
I experienced life threatening ovarian hyperstimulation, made more severe by a twin pregnancy. This was followed by a 19 week miscarriage. I was unaware at the time that I had put my life at so much risk.
We were going through our NHS funded cycle and it seemed that a double egg transfer was giving us the best chance to acheive our dream. It was only after the miscarriage that a doctor admitted that twins were a curse not a blessing and I would have had a much better chance of taking a singleton to full term. I am still suffering with my health two years on and am not a mother. I would never have chosen DET if the risks had been explained.
I wholeheartedly support a ruling to outlaw DET however it will only work if more cycles are funded by the NHS.
Charmaine Biggin, Newark, United Kingdom
Having had some experiences in the fertility business in this country, I will agree with Professor Peter Braude who said âMore IVF cycles are needed, at least threeâ. More cycles of IVF will be highly welcome in this country and this proposal is overdue; after the failure of the first cycle women are left to hang and dry, this is a great shame on this nation.
The old attitude seem though to creating some more difficulties for women, for instance it has been experience by some women we met at our IVF clinic, when the first cycle failed, some fertility doctor will try and attract these desperate women to their private clinic where the women will have to spend money they donât have in the first place, and there is no guarantee of success and at the end the couple are left highly disappointed with the fertility business altogether in this country; The well â offsâ goes abroad for a cheaper and better opportunity for their family.
Peter Affoh, Manchester, North West - England.