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. 1997 May;67(5):830-6.
doi: 10.1016/s0015-0282(97)81393-3.

Cost-effectiveness of infertility treatments: a cohort study

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Free article

Cost-effectiveness of infertility treatments: a cohort study

B J Van Voorhis et al. Fertil Steril. 1997 May.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To determine the cost-effectiveness of infertility treatments.

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Setting: Academic medical center infertility practice.

Patient(s): All patients treated for infertility in a 1-year time span.

Intervention(s): Intrauterine inseminations, clomiphene citrate and IUI (CC-IUI), hMG and IUI (hMG-IUI), assisted reproductive techniques (ART), and neosalpingostomy by laparotomy.

Main outcome measure(s): All medical charges and pregnancy outcomes associated with the treatments were obtained. Cost-effectiveness ratios defined as cost per delivery were determined for each procedure. The effects of a woman's age and the number of spermatozoa inseminated on cost-effectiveness of the procedures was also determined.

Result(s): Intrauterine inseminations, CC-IUI, and hMG-IUI have a similar cost per delivery of between $7,800 and $10,300. All of these were more cost-effective than ART, which had a cost per delivery of $37,000. Assisted reproductive techniques in women with blocked fallopian tubes was more cost-effective than tubal surgery performed by laparotomy, which had a cost per delivery of $76,000. Increasing age in women and lower numbers of spermatozoa inseminated were factors leading to higher costs per delivery for IUI, CC-IUI, hMG-IUI, and ART. Use of donor oocytes reduced the cost per delivery of older women to the range seen in younger women with ART.

Conclusion(s): Our analysis supports, in general, the use of IUI, CC-IUI, and hMG-IUI before ART in women with open fallopian tubes. For women with blocked fallopian tubes, IVF-ET appears to be the best treatment from a cost-effectiveness standpoint.

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