Ponjaert-Kristoffersen I, Bonduelle M, Barnes J, Nekkebroeck J, Loft A, Wennerholm U-B, Tarlatzis B C, Peters C, Hagberg B S, Berner A, Sutcliffe A G
Department of Developmental and Lifespan Psychology, Free University, Brussels, Belgium.
Pediatrics. 2005 Mar;115(3):e283-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.2004-1445.
To date, very few studies have been conducted on the neurodevelopmental well-being of children conceived through intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). The limitations of these studies often include a lack of comparison with a demographically matched, naturally conceived (NC) group and the investigation of only very young children, with relatively small samples sizes. One study showed that there were no differences in IQ scores among ICSI-conceived, in vitro fertilization (IVF)-conceived, and NC children at 5 years of age. Unfortunately, psychomotor development was not assessed in that study. Because findings regarding these children's cognitive and motor development are inconclusive, the aim of this study was to shed more light on the cognitive and motor development of 5-year-old ICSI-conceived children.
A total of 511 ICSI-conceived children were compared with 424 IVF-conceived children and 488 NC controls. Children were recruited in 5 European countries, ie, Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Participation rates ranged from 45% to 96% in the ICSI and IVF groups and from 34% to 78% in the NC group. Cognitive and motor development was assessed with the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence-Revised (WPPSI-R) and McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities (MSCA) Motor Scale, respectively. The WPPSI-R consists of 2 major scales, ie, Verbal and Performance, each including 6 subtests. The 6 Performance Scale subtests are object assembly, geometric design, block design, mazes, picture completion, and animal pegs. The 6 Verbal Scale subtests are information, comprehension, arithmetic, vocabulary, similarities, and sentences. Scores on the Performance and Verbal Scale subtests are summed to yield the performance IQ (PIQ) and verbal IQ (VIQ), respectively. Scores on both the Performance Scale and the Verbal Scale yield the full-scale IQ (FSIQ). IQ scales have a mean score of 100 and a SD of 15. Each subtest has a mean score of 10 and a SD of 3. The MSCA consists of 6 scales, ie, Verbal, Perceptual-Performance, Quantitative, General Cognitive, Memory, and Motor Scale. In this study, only the Motor Scale was administered. This scale assesses the child's coordination during performance of a variety of gross- and fine-motor tasks. Leg coordination, arm coordination, and imitative action tests provide measures of gross-motor ability. Draw-a-design and draw-a-child assess fine-motor coordination, as revealed by the levels of hand coordination and finger dexterity. The mean score for this test is 50, with a SD of .
No differences were identified among ICSI, IVF, and NC children with respect to VIQ, PIQ, or FSIQ scores of the WPPSI-R. Furthermore, there were no differences between groups regarding the discrepancy between VIQ and PIQ scores. These results were not influenced by gender, country, or maternal educational level. However, in the subgroup of firstborn children with mothers who gave birth at an older age (33-45 years), NC children obtained significantly better VIQ and FSIQ scores than did children conceived through assisted reproductive technologies. These differences in VIQ and FSIQ scores between ICSI/IVF and NC children were relative, because NC children scored <1 IQ point higher than ICSI/IVF children. Therefore, these scores show no clinical relevance. For Verbal Scale subtests, variables such as age of the mother at the time of the birth, educational level of the mother, and gender and nationality of the child interacted with mode of conception, resulting in clinically irrelevant differences between scores for the ICSI/IVF and NC groups on the arithmetic, vocabulary, and comprehension subtests. For Performance Scale subtests, these same demographic factors interacted with mode of conception for the block design, object assembly, and animal pegs subtests, again resulting in clinically irrelevant differences among groups. In the 3 groups (ICSI, IVF, and NC), we observed equal numbers of children scoring below 1 SD from the mean on the WPPSI-R and the MSCA.
This study includes a substantial number of children from several European countries. Apart from a few interaction effects between mode of conception and demographic variables, no differences were found when ICSI, IVF, and NC scores on the WPPSI-R and MSCA Motor Scale were compared. Nevertheless, the aforementioned interaction effects could indicate that demographic variables such as maternal age at the time of the birth and maternal educational level play different roles in the cognitive development of IVF and ICSI children, compared with NC children. Additional research is needed to explore and verify this finding. Previous studies revealed that ICSI children, in comparison with NC children, more frequently obtained scores below 1 SD from the mean on 3 subtests of the Performance Scale (object assembly, block design, and mazes) or showed a trend of 5.2% of ICSI children, compared with 2.5% of IVF children and 0.9% of NC children, obtaining a score below 1 SD from the mean, but those findings were not confirmed in this study. Here no differences were found among the 3 groups in the numbers of children scoring below 1 SD from the mean on the VIQ, PIQ, and FSIQ tests and the Verbal and Performance Scale subtests. Motor development results were somewhat more conclusive. There were no differences between the scores of ICSI, IVF, and NC children on the MCSA Motor Scale. No interaction effects were found between mode of conception and demographic variables, indicating that these results are not influenced by gender, nationality, maternal educational level, or maternal age at the time of the birth. Furthermore, equal proportions of children in all 3 groups scored below 1 SD from the mean. The results of this study are reassuring for parents who conceived through ICSI (or IVF). The findings indicate that the motor and cognitive development of their offspring is very similar to that of NC children. However, demographic factors such as maternal educational level and maternal age at the time of the birth might play different roles in the cognitive development of ICSI and IVF children, compared with NC children.
迄今为止,关于通过胞浆内单精子注射(ICSI)受孕的儿童的神经发育状况的研究非常少。这些研究的局限性通常包括缺乏与人口统计学匹配的自然受孕(NC)组进行比较,并且仅对非常年幼的儿童进行调查,样本量相对较小。一项研究表明,ICSI受孕、体外受精(IVF)受孕和自然受孕的5岁儿童在智商得分上没有差异。不幸的是,该研究未评估心理运动发育情况。由于关于这些儿童认知和运动发育的研究结果尚无定论,本研究的目的是进一步阐明5岁ICSI受孕儿童的认知和运动发育情况。
总共将511名ICSI受孕儿童与424名IVF受孕儿童和488名自然受孕对照组儿童进行比较。这些儿童在5个欧洲国家招募,即比利时、丹麦、希腊、瑞典和英国。ICSI组和IVF组的参与率在45%至96%之间,自然受孕组的参与率在34%至78%之间。分别使用韦氏学前及初小儿童智力量表修订版(WPPSI-R)和麦卡锡儿童能力量表(MSCA)运动量表评估认知和运动发育情况。WPPSI-R由两个主要量表组成,即言语量表和操作量表,每个量表包括6个分测验。操作量表的6个分测验是物体拼凑、几何图形、积木图案、迷宫、图片补缺和动物房。言语量表的6个分测验是常识、理解、算术、词汇、类同和句子。操作量表和言语量表分测验的得分分别相加得出操作智商(PIQ)和言语智商(VIQ)。操作量表和言语量表的得分得出全量表智商(FSIQ)。智商量表的平均分为100,标准差为15。每个分测验的平均分为10,标准差为3。MSCA由6个量表组成,即言语量表、感知-操作量表、数量量表、一般认知量表、记忆量表和运动量表。在本研究中,仅实施了运动量表。该量表评估儿童在完成各种大肌肉和小肌肉运动任务时的协调性。腿部协调性、手臂协调性和模仿动作测试提供大肌肉运动能力的测量指标。画图案和画人像评估小肌肉协调性,通过手部协调性和手指灵活性水平体现。该测试的平均分为50,标准差为 。
在WPPSI-R的VIQ、PIQ或FSIQ得分方面,ICSI组、IVF组和自然受孕组儿童之间未发现差异。此外,各组在VIQ和PIQ得分差异方面也没有差异。这些结果不受性别、国家或母亲教育水平的影响。然而,在母亲年龄较大(33 - 45岁)的头胎儿童亚组中,自然受孕儿童的VIQ和FSIQ得分显著高于通过辅助生殖技术受孕的儿童。ICSI/IVF组和自然受孕组儿童在VIQ和FSIQ得分上的这些差异是相对的,因为自然受孕儿童的得分仅比ICSI/IVF儿童高不到1个智商点。因此,这些得分不具有临床相关性。对于言语量表分测验,母亲分娩时的年龄、母亲的教育水平以及儿童的性别和国籍等变量与受孕方式相互作用,导致ICSI/IVF组和自然受孕组在算术、词汇和理解分测验的得分之间存在临床上不相关的差异。对于操作量表分测验,这些相同的人口统计学因素在积木图案、物体拼凑和动物房分测验中与受孕方式相互作用,同样导致各组之间存在临床上不相关的差异。在三组(ICSI组、IVF组和自然受孕组)中,我们观察到在WPPSI-R和MSCA上得分低于平均分1个标准差的儿童数量相等。
本研究纳入了来自几个欧洲国家的大量儿童。除了受孕方式与人口统计学变量之间的一些相互作用效应外,比较ICSI组、IVF组和自然受孕组在WPPSI-R和MSCA运动量表上的得分时未发现差异。然而,上述相互作用效应可能表明,与自然受孕儿童相比,母亲分娩时的年龄和母亲的教育水平等人口统计学变量在IVF和ICSI儿童的认知发展中发挥着不同的作用。需要进一步的研究来探索和验证这一发现。先前的研究表明,与自然受孕儿童相比,ICSI儿童在操作量表的3个分测验(物体拼凑、积木图案和迷宫)上更频繁地获得低于平均分1个标准差的得分,或者显示出一种趋势,即5.2%的ICSI儿童得分低于平均分1个标准差,而IVF儿童为2.5%,自然受孕儿童为0.9%,但本研究未证实这些发现。在VIQ、PIQ和FSIQ测试以及言语和操作量表分测验中,三组中得分低于平均分1个标准差的儿童数量没有差异。运动发育结果在某种程度上更具确定性。ICSI组、IVF组和自然受孕组儿童在MCSA运动量表上的得分没有差异。在受孕方式和人口统计学变量之间未发现相互作用效应,表明这些结果不受性别、国籍、母亲教育水平或母亲分娩时年龄的影响。此外,三组中得分低于平均分1个标准差的儿童比例相等。本研究结果让通过ICSI(或IVF)受孕的父母放心。研究结果表明,他们后代的运动和认知发育与自然受孕儿童非常相似。然而,与自然受孕儿童相比,母亲教育水平和母亲分娩时年龄等人口统计学因素可能在ICSI和IVF儿童的认知发展中发挥不同的作用。