RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate embryos with direct cleavage (≤5 hours) from two to three cells (DC2-3) and correlate this morphokinetic parameter to implantation and ongoing pregnancy. DESIGN: Clinical multicenter retrospective study. SETTING: Private in vitro fertilization (IVF) centers. PATIENT(S): From three clinics, a total of 979 treatments including 5,225 embryos using autologous or donated oocytes, of which 1,659 embryos were transferred. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Clinical pregnancy confirmed by ultrasound in week 7. RESULT(S): Of the total embryo cohort, 715 (13.7%) underwent direct cleavage from two to three cells, 1,659 embryos were transferred to recipients, and 109 of the transferred embryos cleaved directly from two to three cells (6.6%). Only one DC2-3 embryo was known to result in a clinical pregnancy (1%) and 80 (73.4%) DC2-3 embryos did not implant. Of the 1,550 embryos transferred not showing DC2-3, 203 embryos were from treatments with 100% implantation (13.1%), and 804 (51.8%) embryos did not implant. The known implantation rate of DC2-3 embryos was statistically significantly lower than for embryos with a normal cleavage pattern (1.2% vs. 20.2%, respectively). CONCLUSION(S): Embryos with DC2-3 had a statistically significantly lower implantation rate than embryos with a normal cleavage pattern, suggesting that rejection of these embryos for transfer could improve the implantation rate.