Abstract
One of the parameters potentially affecting the in vitro growth of preimplantation embryos is the oxygen concentration in the culture environment. An increased oxygen concentration causes the generation of ROS which in turn can cause damage to the cells and seriously disrupt the embryonic development. Previous studies have assessed oxygen concentrations in the fallopian tubes of several mammals of between 5 and 8%, while the oxygen levels in the uterus were found to be even lower; similar measurements have been confirmed in humans. In addition, studies in mammalian embryos showed that low oxygen concentrations improve embryo development. Multiple studies on the effect of the oxygen concentration on human embryos have been conducted so far with diverse methodologies and objectives. Data from these have been included in three meta-analyses. All meta-analyses indicate the potential benefit in favor of a low oxygen concentration, though data are considered to be of a low methodological quality and further studies are considered necessary. However, based on the existing evidence, it is suggested that a low oxygen concentration should be adopted in the routine of the IVF laboratory, especially in the case of blastocyst culture.
1. Introduction
In the first steps of in vitro fertilization (IVF), Steptoe et al. proposed the adoption of the three gases system (5% CO2/5% O2/90% N2) as suitable for the human blastocyst culture [1,2]. The beneficial effect of a low oxygen concentration on embryo culture has also been confirmed in animal models and particularly in in vitro mouse embryo cultures. The blastocyst development and quality of mice embryos was compared under three different oxygen concentrations (5, 20, and 40%). It was shown that mouse blastocysts cultured under 5% consisted of more blastomeres and numerically exceeded those developed under higher oxygen levels [3].
However, satisfactory results in the embryo culture under 20% O2 led to the use of N2 being abandoned in most IVF laboratories due to additional costs [2,3]. In the 1990s, researchers focused on the use of low oxygen in a human embryo culture due to the extension of the culture to the blastocyst stage which aimed to transfer fewer embryos in order to reduce multiple pregnancies [4]. The concept behind the increasing interest in applying lower levels of oxygen lies in the potential dangers associated with atmospheric oxygen concentrations. Several studies confirmed the harmful effect of reactive oxygen species (ROS) derived from the high oxygen levels present in the atmosphere [5,6]. The aim of the current review is to address the benefit of low oxygen levels on mammalian embryo development with particular emphasis on the human embryo development in assisted reproductive technology (ART). It also provides an insight into the physiological shifts induced by the different oxygen levels.
2. Oxygen Concentration in Female Reproductive Tract
There have been repetitive attempts to determine the physiological oxygen levels in the female reproductive tract in several mammals. In a study focusing on oxygen levels in monkeys, hamsters and rabbits, considerable differences were assessed: the oxygen levels varied from 1.5% in the monkey uterus to 8.7% in the rabbit fallopian tube and uterus and hamster uterus [7]. Similar results were presented for the oxygen levels in the rabbit oviduct: the assessed range varied between 40 mmHg (5.3%) and 75 mmHg (9.9%) [8]. A consensus range for the oxygen concentration in the female reproductive tract is 2 to 8% [2,9].
Other experimental studies provided an insight into the effect of different parameters on intrauterine oxygen tension in rats, hamsters and guinea pigs [10,11,12,13]. The impact of the menstrual cycle’s regulatory hormones (estrogens and progesterones) is of particular importance: the peak of the O2 levels was found under the effect of low estrogen and high progesterone levels [9,11]. It is noteworthy that oxygen levels are dependent on multiple physiologic (e.g., hormones, uterine cavity anatomy) and pathologic (e.g., cancer, infections) conditions and factors [9,14].
The studies conducted on humans are relatively few. Three major studies assessed the oxygen levels in the human female reproductive tract. The first, by Yedwab et al., compared the oxygen partial pressure among other parameters in women and female rats’ uteri throughout the menstrual cycle and observed an increase in oxygen levels by 86–90% in the ovulatory phase in humans (11 mmHg) and by 224% during the late proestrus phase in rats [15]. A more recent study observed a median oxygen pressure of 18.9 mmHg, corresponding to 11.8% oxygen air saturation with a wide range between 4 and 27% assessed. Pregnant women participating in the study exhibited lower levels at 9% oxygen air saturation, whereas non-pregnant women showed oxygen levels of 12.4% [16]. The last study documented uterine oxygen levels in women suffering from three types of gynecological malignancies and healthy controls. The pO2 levels were 28.5 mmHg for healthy controls and slightly decreased in all individuals suffering from cancer [14]. Overall, the oxygen concentration in the human uterine cavity has been assessed at almost 2%, ranging from 1.4 to 3.8% [14,15,16]. However, all three studies focused on different objectives and utilized different methods for the measurement of the oxygen levels.
Other studies attempted to assess the use of oxygen by the oocytes and the oxygen levels in the follicular fluid. In a study examining the composition of the human follicular fluid, Shalgi et al. observed the considerable variability of the oxygen levels in the 36 samples assessed. A mean oxygen tension of 54.3 mmHg was reported, corresponding to oxygen levels of almost 7% [17]. The exact way of oxygen utilization by the cumulus–oocyte complex was the objective of a mathematical model: it was concluded that dissolved oxygen is primarily consumed by the cumulus cells and scarcely reaches the oocyte, even under favoring conditions [18]. Contradictory results were the outcome of a different mathematical model undertaken on bovine and murine cumulus–oocyte complexes. It was found that cumulus cells consume only 0.25 to 0.5% of the total oxygen levels available and thus allow the oocyte to absorb most of it [19].
3. The Effect of Oxygen Levels on Early Embryo Metabolism
Throughout the preimplantation period the embryo depends on oxidative phosphorylation. During the cleavage state, the embryo metabolism relies primarily on pyruvate. The same metabolic pattern is evident in the morula stage as well. This substrate utilization analysis was performed in a culture microdroplet using an ultramicrofluorescence assay [20,21,22]. After compaction (blastomeres become increasingly coherent) and the blastocyst formation, a major metabolic shift occurs. The embryo metabolism becomes increasingly dependent on oxygen. Consequently, the embryo is capable of blastocoele formation and protein synthesis [23,24]. After the blastocoele formation, the blastocyst is comprised of the inner cell mass and the trophectoderm. These cells exhibit different energy requirements, as a mouse study verified. Trophectoderm cells use increasingly specific amino-acids, contain more mitochondria in comparison to the inner cell mass, produce more substrates and energy-containing substances (e.g., ATP) and thus consume greater amounts of oxygen [25].
ROS may result from either cellular metabolic reactions or the surrounding environment of the embryo. The main ROS produced from intracellular procedures include superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical [26]. The embryo protects itself from internal and external ROS by the use of specific antioxidant enzymes, including superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase and gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase [26]. External protective barriers are also present in the follicular and fallopian fluid: hypotaurine, taurine and ascorbic acid [27]. The diverse oxygen levels in the different parts of the female reproductive tract are also strongly associated with the increasing vulnerability due to potential ROS formation. The gradients of oxygen levels throughout the fallopian tubes and the uterus seem to play a stronger protective role for the early-stage embryo than several antioxidant enzymes [24].
The embryos are confronted with excessive amounts of ROS in an ART laboratory setting. The arrest of embryos’ development or the presentation of any other developmental disturbance has been accompanied by increased ROS in vitro, but not in vivo [28]. Consequently, ROS from external sources pose an important threat to normal development and pregnancy outcomes. Potential sources of ROS include increased oxygen levels, light or even the sperm cells necessary for fertilization. The potential harmful effect of increased oxygen levels has been confirmed from mouse models. A product of superoxide was targeted using fluorescence. It was demonstrated that mice cultured under lower oxygen levels (under 5% O2) exhibited the lowest fluorescent emissions compared to higher oxygen levels (20% and 40%) and the effect was dose-dependent [29]. In a similar staining-based study, the peroxide levels were found to be significantly decreased both in the two-cell and four-cell stages of embryo cultures under 5% O2 [30]. In another study investigating the detrimental impact of light exposure on hamster embryos, it was found that the generation of H2O2 during light exposure was significantly greater when the embryos were cultured at 20% O2 rather than 5% [31].
The direct effect of the ROS on the embryo metabolism of carbohydrates, lipids and amino acids has been studied extensively. Some data are also based on animal models, mostly mice [32,33]. Recent studies have focused on a more comprehensive analysis of the ROS’ impact on proteomics and even epigenetics, through the impact of dioxygenases and the paternal protamines on histone modification [34,35,36]. In a time-of-flight (TOF) spectrometry analysis of five preimplantation mice embryos, 32 proteins were found which could serve as potential biomarkers. Mice cultures under 5% O2 exhibited a significant resemblance to in vivo developed embryos, whereas the analysis of mice cultures under 20% oxygen showed the decreased expression of 10 proteins [37]. The gene expression patterns are also affected by the oxidative stress. Rinaudo et al. observed that embryos cultured under 5% O2 showed gene expression patterns that are expected in embryos developed in vivo [38]. The outcome of this study corresponds to the outcome of the study focusing on proteomics. Both of them imply that low oxygen tension creates similar conditions for the embryo’s development in vivo. The well-established toxic impact of ROS can be restricted, particularly in the IVF setting. Researchers have proposed potential ways in that direction. Apart from including substances with anti-oxidant actions in the culture medium, restricting light exposure to the culture media and the embryo culture oil and restricting the duration of gamete coincubation in order to avoid ROS production from the sperm metabolism, researchers have particularly emphasized one other method. This method uses lower oxygen tensions in the ART laboratory during insemination, fertilization and other relative procedures [6,39].
4. Culture of Mammalian Embryos under Low Oxygen Levels
The importance of the oxygen levels in embryo cultures is well-established. Since 1978, multiple studies have been conducted on various animal models, demonstrating the need for lowering oxygen levels. The decreased oxygen tension has resulted in better results in all studies carried out so far in various animal species [39].
Most of the animal-model-based studies exploring the benefits of a lower oxygen concentration on embryo cultures were conducted on rodents, including mice, rats and hamsters (Table 1). The first one, by Quinn et al., which took place back in 1978, focused on the oxygen levels’ impact on preimplantation embryo culture parameters and subsequent embryo quality. The study examined different oxygen levels: 5% O2 (classified as low) and 20/40% O2 (classified as high). It concluded that a culture under 5% O2 was beneficial for the preimplantation embryos, as this condition allowed more embryos to progress to the blastocyst stage and resulted in better quality embryos with an increased number of blastomeres [3]. The authors also provided an insight into a potential physiological mechanism behind the decreased blastomere number in embryos cultured under high oxygen levels: the blastomeres may perceive the oxygen levels as a marker for their position in the embryo, from the core to the periphery. Under a high oxygen level, they tend to misunderstand their position and thus divide at a slower rate [3]. Another study attempted to clarify the exact stages of embryo development which are affected by different oxygen concentrations. Therefore, they allocated the examined embryos, at first, in two culture groups (under 5% O2 or 20% O2) for the first 2 days of culture and afterwards they randomized the embryos for the next 2 days under the two possible oxygen levels, which resulted in four groups. They concluded that the oxygen levels affect the outcome both during the cleavage stage and after the compaction stage. The decrease in the oxygen levels after 48 h was not linked to a substantial improvement of the parameters examined. Likewise, all embryos which were cultured for a certain time interval under high oxygen levels had to withstand damage, which was not reimbursed after the oxygen levels’ shift. An additional outcome of the study is the fact that cleavage delay was particularly high in embryos cultured under 20% O2 [40]. Two other studies with mice primarily examined the genetic status and the way it may be affected by different oxygen levels. In a FISH-based study, BALB/cWT mice, which are susceptible to Y chromosome abnormalities, were examined. Increased mosaicism was observed among embryos cultured under 20% O2, whereas embryos cultured under 5% oxygen had mosaicism levels comparable to the control branch of the study [41]. Apart from the effect on the gene expression pattern analyzed previously, the microarray study by Rinaudo et al. verified that a culture under 5% oxygen leads to an increased rate of embryo development and an increased cell number [38]. Kishi et al. [42] showed that hamster embryos cultured in hamster embryo culture (HEMC-1) had a higher blastocyst rate under 5% O2 than under 20% O2 levels (20.1% vs. 5.5%, respectively). In another study, where multiple parameters were evaluated, it was found that the progression of hamster 2-cell embryos to the blastocyst stage was facilitated under 5% or 10% oxygen levels, whereas 10% O2 was identified as the optimal oxygen level for hamster embryo cultures [43].
The blastocyst rate and the related parameters were in the epicenter of a rabbit embryo study, carried out under multiple oxygen levels in two groups (5, 10 and 15% O2 and 1, 5 and 20% O2). In the first group, cultures under 5, 10 and 15% O2 resulted in 48, 38 and 21% of the embryos reaching the hatching blastocyst stage, with 258, 226 and 188 cells per embryo, respectively. In the second group, cultures under 1, 5 and 20% O2 led to a 67, 72 and 29% proportion of hatching embryos, respectively. For the same group, the average cells per embryo were significantly higher under 1% O2 and 5% O2 compared to 20% O2 [44]. The study by Karja et al. examined the effect of different oxygen levels (8–10% and 20%) on the in vitro maturation (IVM) of porcine oocytes, IVF and in vitro embryo production. It was shown that a similar number of oocytes reached the MII phase and were fertilized after IVM. The beneficial character of the low oxygen levels (8–10%) was reflected in the blastocyst formation rates. In addition, DNA fragmentation was found significantly lower under low oxygen levels (8–10%) [45]. Goat two- to four-cell embryos were cultured for a 6-day interval either under 20% O2 or 7% O2 in another comparative study. In total, 80% of the embryos reached the expanded or/and hatched blastocyst stage under 7% O2 in contrast to merely 29% in the other group. Also, the mean embryo cell number was higher under the low oxygen levels’ culture (7%) [46]. Leoni et al. examined bovine embryo cultures under 5% and 20% oxygen levels. The blastocyst formation rate, both on the 6th and on the 7th day under 5% O2, emerged as significantly higher (63.04% vs. 47.36% and 35.10% vs. 26.09%, respectively) [47]. A more recent study focused on the oocyte maturation and embryo culture of the yak species under different oxygen levels (20% O2, 10% O2, 5% O2, 1% O2) [48]. This study also confirmed that oocyte maturation, blastocyst and hatched blastocyst rates as well as the total blastocyst cell number, the inner cell mass cells and the trophectoderm cells were significantly higher under 5% O2. The study also addressed the effect of ultra-low oxygen levels: the oocyte maturation, the cleavage, the blastocyst and the hatched blastocyst rates under 1% O2 were the lowest assessed [48]. In the last two studies mentioned, the cleavage rates were found to be significantly higher under high oxygen levels [47,48] and it was speculated that the detrimental effects of high oxygen levels are mainly manifested on day 3 with blastulation, more than in the earlier development [48]. The latter study also analyzed other molecular parameters, including the apoptosis index of oocytes and blastocyst cells and the expression patterns of genes related to metabolism, antioxidant response, apoptosis, oocyte competence and embryonic developmental markers. All of them were the lowest under 5% O2 and the highest under 1% O2 [48]. We could speculate that the lower outcome with 1% O2 indicates that this extra-low oxygen level is inadequate to support embryo metabolism.
A recent study investigating the effects of oxygen levels on IVM, IVF and the embryo development of common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) gave interesting results which underline the species-specific differences in these processes [49]. IVM and IVF were performed under 8% or 20% O2 with the latter giving better results, whereas the embryo culture was performed under 5% or 20% O2, with 5% O2 resulting in a better embryo morphology and developmental rates [49]. The authors speculated that during IVM and IVF procedures, the cumulus cells surrounding the oocyte act as a barrier which lowers the amount of O2 available for the oocyte and, at the same time, protects it from excessive oxidation; hence, with 20% O2, the oocyte has acceptable O2 tension, whereas with 8% O2, it is probably in hypoxic conditions. They also suggested that the use of oil covering the microdroplets of the culture medium which hosts the oocytes (during IVM and IVF) and the sperm (during IVF) is also another factor lowering the O2 tension [49].
It is obvious that the above mentioned animal studies, summarized in Table 1, provide sufficient evidence of the culture in οxygen levels lower than 20% for embryo development. Although the optimal level of oxygen differs by the species, most of the studies found that culture under 5% O2 is beneficial.
Table 1.
Summary of major animal studies KSOM, potassium-supplemented simplex optimized medium; IVM, in vitro maturation; IVF, in vitro fertilization; HECM-1, hamster embryo culture medium-1; Mkrb, modified Krebs–Ringer bicarbonate solution; SOF, synthetic oviduct fluid; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-nick end labeling; WT, wild type; BSA, bovine serum albumin; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization.
Table 1.
Summary of major animal studies KSOM, potassium-supplemented simplex optimized medium; IVM, in vitro maturation; IVF, in vitro fertilization; HECM-1, hamster embryo culture medium-1; Mkrb, modified Krebs–Ringer bicarbonate solution; SOF, synthetic oviduct fluid; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-nick end labeling; WT, wild type; BSA, bovine serum albumin; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization.
| Study | Species | Objective | Primary Outcomes | Secondary Outcomes and Additional Remarks | Reproductive Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rinaudo et al. (2006) [38] | Mouse | Effect of oxygen levels (5% or 20%) on gene expression patterns |
|
| Not specified |
| Quinn et al. (1978) [3] | Mouse | Effect of different oxygen levels on preimplantation embryo culture |
|
| Not specified |
| Kishi et al. (1991) [42] | Rat | Effect of HECM-1 medium use on rat 1-cell embryo culture |
|
| Not specified |
| McKiernan et al. (1990) [43] | Hamster | Effect of different parameters on hamster embryo culture |
|
| Not specified |
| Li et al. (1993) [44] | Rabbit | Effect of different oxygen levels (1–20% O2) on progression to blastocyst and blastocyst-related parameters |
|
| Not specified |
| Karja et al. (2004) [45] | Pig | Effect of different oxygen levels (8–10% or 20%) on oocyte characteristics and embryo quality parameters |
|
| IVM/IVF/in vitro culture |
| Batt et al. (1991) [46] | Goat | Effect of different oxygen levels (7% or 20%) and different protein sources in the culture medium on preimplantation embryo parameters |
|
| Not specified |
| Leoni et al. (2007) [47] | Ovine | Effect of oxygen levels (5% or 20%) on ovine embryo culture quality parameters |
|
| IVF |
| Bean et al. (2002) [41] | Mouse | Effect of oxygen levels (5% or 20%) on genetic status |
|
| IVF |
| Wale et al. (2010) [40] | Mouse | Effect of oxygen levels and oxygen level shifts on preimplantation embryo culture |
|
| Not specified |
| He et al. (2020) [48] | Yak | Effect of different oxygen levels (20% O2, 10% O2, 5% O2 or 1% O2) on oocyte maturation, embryo preimplantation potential and other parameters |
|
| IVF |
| Tkachenko et al. (2017) [49] | Marmoset | Effect of paired oxygen levels (8% O2–5% O2, 20% O2–20% O2, 20% O2–5% O2 and 8% O2–20% O2) on in vitro maturation (IVM) and in vitro fertilization (IVF), respectively. |
|
| IVM/IVF |
5. Culture of Human Embryos under Low Oxygen Levels
Although Steptoe et al. proposed in their monumental study that the human embryo culture should take place under low oxygen levels, the atmospheric oxygen levels dominated for years in the ART laboratories [1]. Some researchers attempted to explain this trend and concluded the following possible explanations: the need for a N2 supply and new incubators that entail additional costs, the improvement of culture media used in human IVF procedures and the embryo transfer in the four-cell or eight-cell stage on the 2nd or the 3rd day, respectively [4]. However, the culture of human embryos under low (5%) oxygen levels is gaining ground and a lot of studies seem to support the adoption of this method in everyday laboratory setting.
Overall, the results of twelve prospective randomized studies, two randomized studies, four prospective randomized controlled trials, four randomized controlled studies, three comparative studies, one retrospective study, one monocentric retrospective observational study, one cohort study, one retrospective cross-sectional study, one meta-analysis, one review with quantitative synthesis and one systematic review with meta-analysis are presented (Table 2).
All of the studies addressed the impact of low oxygen levels on human embryo cultures and their related parameters. The number of participants in the studies varied significantly, ranging from 100 oocyte donation receivers to 1382 patients. Some studies did not specify the exact number of patients or participants and referred merely to the total number of IVF cycles or the oocyte retrieval cycles undertaken. It is of note that both fertilization methods were used, either IVF, ICSI or a combination of both.
In order to examine whether the human embryo culture under 5% oxygen is indeed advantageous, several parameters have been assessed. The most frequent parameters examined were the fertilization rate, criteria related to blastocyst and embryo quality, developmental rate, implantation and pregnancy rate. One of the first studies published by Dumoulin et al. indicated a significantly increased pregnancy rate under low oxygen levels (24.2% under 5% oxygen in comparison to 19.4% under atmospheric conditions) [50]. In another study by the same researchers, there was a significant improvement to the blastocyst formation rate (25.8% vs. 20.4%) and blastocyst quality under 5% oxygen [51]. The better embryo quality was evaluated as a common finding in many studies, also by de los Santos et al., who referred particularly to the increased blastomere number [52]. In another prospective randomized study simultaneously assessing both fertilization methods, only the embryo score on day 3 significantly improved in cultures under 5% oxygen, without affecting the fertilization rates [53]. Meintjes et al. identified strong proponents of the embryo culture under 5% oxygen, as they found both better preimplantation development (42.9% vs. 30.7%) and an increased living birth rate (57.4% vs. 42.6%) [54].
Sibling oocyte development was a striking feature of another prospective randomized study. The embryos cultured under 5% oxygen exhibited an increased blastocyst formation rate for both fertilization methods (IVF: 73.2% vs. 63.1% and ICSI: 67.4% vs. 54.7%), an increased blastocyst quality (IVF: 31.1% VS. 14.6% and ICSI: 18.9% vs. 11.4%) and a significantly increased optimal blastocyst formation ratio on day 5 (at 2.1 for IVF and 1.7 for ICSI). Although all the previously mentioned outcomes were clearly in favor of the culture under 5% oxygen, the fertilization rates were found to be unaffected with both fertilization methods (IVF: 59% vs. 43.2% and ICSI: 51.2% vs. 28.5%) [55].
Nanassy et al. conducted a retrospective study in order to examine the way in which the oxygen level shifts affected the embryo quality, pregnancy and implantation rate between the 3rd and the 5th day. Until the 3rd day, all embryo cultures took place under 20% O2. After the 3rd day, 189 and 193 patients were randomized for the group with cultures under 5% O2 and 20% O2, respectively. No significant difference could be observed in terms of the embryo quality, implantation rates (44.06% under the 5% O2 vs. 44.16% under 20% O2), the pregnancy rate (71.27% under the 5% O2 vs. 78.72% under 20% O2) and the clinical pregnancy rate (58.56% under the 5% O2 vs. 64.36% under 20% O2). This study confirmed the presumption put forward by another study with mice showing that cultures already damaged un-der high oxygen levels can not improve if the oxygen tension is reduced [40,56]. In another study by Peng et al., higher fertilization and implantation rates were observed primarily for the group of embryos cultured under low oxygen levels. However, this was the first study to indicate that embryos cultured under 20% O2 showed significantly higher fertilization rates, implantation rates and quality compared to embryos cultured under high oxygen levels for the first 2 days and then cultured under lower oxygen levels. This study speculated that embryos are more sensitive to oxygen level shifts than to oxygen levels per se [57].
The birthweight in embryos developed under low oxygen levels was assessed in the unique cohort study by Van Montfoort et al. The study could not link the oxygen levels to the birthweight. However, a significant increase in embryo quality was reported (45.8% under 5% O2 and 30.9% under 20% O2). Although there was no correlation to the live birth rate, embryos of good quality were eligible for cryopreservation [58]. A significant increase in cryopreservation eligibility for embryos cultured under low oxygen levels (30.8% under 5% O2 and 19.2% under 20% O2) was also observed by Sepulveda et al., together with better embryo quality (55.4% under 5% O2 and 41.8% under 20% O2). All the other parameters assessed did not reach statistical significance, i.e., implantation rates (41.8% under 5% O2 and 36.8% under 20% O2) and pregnancy rates (55.3% under 5% O2 and 54.6% under 20% O2) [59]. Also, Waldenstrom et al. observed a higher number of eligible blastocysts for cryopreservation (1.7 in the culture under 5% O2 vs. 1.1 in the culture under 19% O2) together with a satisfactory blastocyst formation rate (47.8% in the culture under 5% O2 vs. 42.1% in the culture under 19% O2) and the mean number of available blastocysts (3.8 in the culture under 5% O2 vs. 3.3 in the culture under 19% O2) [60]. In a prospective randomized study, Bahceci et al., found that although the embryo quality in the transfers on day 3 was better in cultures under 5% O2, the authors concluded that the oxygen levels did not particularly affect the outcome. It is of note that this study did not evaluate the embryos’ progression until the blastocyst stage [61]. The better quality of the embryos is a concept shared by another study [62] which reported optimal blastocyst features under 5% O2. However, the low oxygen levels did not show a significant impact neither on implantation rates (28.8% under 5% O2 and 25.2% under 20% O2) nor on ongoing pregnancy rates (31.6% under 5% O2 and 27.1% under 20% O2), although they were beneficial for the pregnancy rates in the special subgroup of poor responders (23% under 5% O2 and 9.8% under 20% O2) [62]. In contrast to the previous findings, Kasterstein et al. observed a significant increase both in the implantation and pregnancy rates with cultures under 5% O2 [63]. Only the fertilization rates were found to be relatively similar between the two groups assessed. An increased number of blastomeres and an optimal embryo quality were also parts of the findings, explaining also the significantly higher number of embryos eligible for transfer (31.6% under 5% O2 vs. 23.1% under 20% O2). In this study, the live birth rate was significantly higher under the low oxygen levels’ culture (34.2% under 5% O2 vs. 15.8% under 20% O2) [64]. Like all the previous studies, Ciray et al. emphasized the significantly better embryo and blastocyst quality observed [64].
Paternot et al., in a randomized controlled trial, evaluated the quality of embryos up to day 3 under 5% or 20% O2 without finding significant differences [65]. This is the only study that actively discourages from the use of low oxygen levels in embryo cultures [65].
Ruiz and her collaborators in IVI performed a prospective randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of group embryo cultures under 5% O2 in benchtop incubators, whereas the control group embryos were cultured individually at 20% O2 in common large incubators. In the statistical analysis, fresh embryo transfers as well as frozen ones were included [66]. With this strategy, the fertilization rate was not different, but there was a higher blastocyst rate, implantation and live birth rate with the fresh embryo transfers [66]. Taking into consideration the frozen embryo transfers, the cumulative implantation rate and cumulative live birth rate were higher as well [66].
Another team from Zagreb performed a prospective randomized trial comparing benchtop incubators with 5% O2 and conventional incubators with 20% O2 [67]. The only results in favor of the benchtop incubators with 5% O2 was the number of blastocysts on day 5 and clinical pregnancy after a single blastocyst transfer; however, there was not any improvement in the clinical pregnancy for all subgroups, nor in the live birth rate, which was the primary outcome of this study [67].
Although almost all the studies compare 5% O2 to 20% O2, a Chinese team investigated the effects of continuous embryo culture under ultra-low (2%) O2 tension vs. 5% O2 tension [68]. They did not find differences in the embryo development nor in the clinical or ongoing pregnancies between the two groups and, therefore, they concluded that the continuous culture under 2% O2 does not give any advantage for the in vitro development of human embryos [68]. Similarly, the team of M. Bedaiwy performed a study comparing 3.5% O2 to 5% O2. The results were disappointing for the cultures under 3.5% O2: though the fertilization and cleavage rates were better, the compaction rate, the number of high-quality blastocysts, the implantation rate and the clinical pregnancy rate were in favor of cultures under 5% O2 [69].
In a meta-analysis, no statistically remarkable difference was assessed between the cultures at 5–6% O2 or 20% O2 concerning fertilization, implantation and ongoing pregnancy. The only benefit observed under low oxygen levels referred to embryos transferred on day 5 and day 6. Nevertheless, the authors consider additional studies as advisable [70]. In contrast, a review with quantitative synthesis concluded that low oxygen (5–6%) levels were beneficial as living birth rates, clinical pregnancy rates and ongoing pregnancies were positively affected, leading to an increase in the success rates from 32% to 43%, without any increase in multiple pregnancies, miscarriages and congenital deformities [71]. In the most recent meta-analysis, Nastri et al. found no difference between 5 and 6% O2 and 20% O2 regarding fertilization and the cleavage rate, a better morphology at the cleavage stage with 5–6% O2 and they observed a small improvement in the live birth/ongoing pregnancy and clinical pregnancy rates with the use of 5–6% O2 [72]. However, they underlined that the available evidence is of very low quality; therefore, more large, well-contacted, randomized clinical trials are needed [72].
Nevertheless, new culture strategies appeared. Several researchers, taking into account the conditions recorded to prevail in the female reproductive system, proposed and tested a shift from 5% O2 to 2% O2 after day 2–3, i.e., at the morula and blastocyst stages. It is evident that the strategy of using two phases of low oxygen concentrations (5% in the first 2–3 days of preimplantation development and 2% thereafter) better simulates the physiological conditions to which embryos are exposed within the female reproductive system. However, the reported results are contradictory. In 2016, Yang et al. thawed day-3 embryos that had been cultured at 20% O2 and further cultured either at 2% O2, 5% O2 or 20% O2 [73]. There were no differences among the three groups in terms of the number of blastocysts and the number of high-quality blastocysts [73]. In the same year, Kaser et al., in a randomized controlled trial, used bipronucleate and tripronucleate embryos allocated either for continuous culture in 5% O2 or in 5% O2 from day 1 to day 3 and 2% O2 from day 3 to day 5 [74]. Although they found that the total yield of blastocysts was higher with the biphasic culture, these blastocysts had fewer cells than the blastocysts derived under 5% O2 [74]. De Munck et al. used the same biphasic oxygen concentration strategy without finding any improvement in embryo development, quality and the utilization rate of blastocysts [75]. On the contrary, Broillet et al., in an observational retrospective study, reported a significant improvement in the total and usable blastocyst rates as well as a higher cumulative birth rate with the biphasic (5–2%) oxygen concentration strategy [76]. Recently, Li et al. reported that the biphasic strategy (5–2% O2) resulted in a better blastulation rate for low-quality cleavage embryos, but not for high-quality cleavage embryos [77]. The most recent study is a retrospective cross-sectional one that found only marginal benefits with the biphasic (5–2%) oxygen strategy: they performed both fresh and frozen embryo transfers, finding that there was no difference in the pregnancy and implantation rates although, in fresh embryo transfers, the implantation rate of embryos cultured with the biphasic oxygen strategy was significantly better [78].
Recently, a new embryo culture strategy has been tested. Herbemont et al., based on the results of Wale and Gardner’s study in mouse embryos [40], designed and performed a prospective randomized study with multiple arms: culturing preimplantation human embryos initially with either 20% O2 or 5% O2 and then (day 5–6) with 20% O2 and either 5% O2 or 2% O2 [79]. The hypothesis for this study was that embryos are particularly susceptible to oxidative stress during the first 2 days of development, whereas after the activation of the embryonic genome, they can develop unhindered even in atmospheric oxygen conditions [79]. The primary study endpoints were the day-2 embryo quality and blastocyst quality. According to the results of this study, on day 2, higher division rates and more high-quality embryos were obtained in the 5% O2 culture than in the 20% O2 culture. Culturing blastocysts in either 5% O2 or 2% O2 gave better-quality blastocysts than the culture in 20% O2 [79]. However, there were no statistically significant differences in the clinical outcome of the blastocyst transfer, regardless of whether they were grown under atmospheric oxygen or hypoxic conditions [79]. Therefore, although it has been re-established that embryos are particularly vulnerable to 20% O2 conditions during the first 2 days of development, the use of low oxygen concentrations (2% or 5%) appears to be advantageous for obtaining good-quality blastocysts [79].
It is obvious that there are considerable differences between the aforementioned studies regarding the settings, the primary outcomes, the size of the study populations and not all of them are randomized clinical trials (Table 2). Therefore, it is not strange that the meta-analysis of Nastri et al. found that the available data are of a low quality [72]. On the other hand, it is clear that all but one of these studies found that cultures of human embryos under 5–6% O2 give some advantage over the cultures under atmospheric O2. Hence, we can draw some conclusions with considerable certainty: 1. The fertilization rate, especially with ICSI, seem to not be influenced significantly by the oxygen tension. 2. Embryo development is better under 5% O2 and this is more obvious in the blastocyst formation rate and quality. 3. In our opinion, an initial culture under 20% O2 and a shift to 5% O2 after 2–3 days does not guarantee any advantage. 4. The use of a biphasic oxygen strategy (5% during the first three days, 2% afterwards) is promising as it appears to better reproduce the physiological conditions; however, the existing evidence is not strong enough to support this.
Table 2.
Summary of major human studies. IVF, conventional in vitro fertilization; ICSI, intracytoplasmic sperm injection; PNs, pronuclei.
Table 2.
Summary of major human studies. IVF, conventional in vitro fertilization; ICSI, intracytoplasmic sperm injection; PNs, pronuclei.
| Study | Study Type | Objective | Study Population | Outcome | Reproductive Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dumoulin et al. (1995) [50] | Prospective randomized study | Evaluation of oxygen levels (5% CO2/5% O2/90% N2 or 5% CO2/20% O2) on fertilization rates, development during transfer day, implantation and pregnancy rates | 257 IVF cycles from 186 patients |
| IVF |
| Dumoulin et al. (1999) [51] | Prospective randomized study | Evaluation of oxygen levels (5% O2 or 20% O2) on fertilization rates, implantation rates and development during 2nd or 3rd day | 1380 IVF cycles |
| IVF |
| Bahceci et al. (2005) [61] | Prospective randomized study | Comparison of embryo culture under 5% O2 or 20% O2 in relation to the ICSI outcome | 822 oocyte retrieval cycles, 712 of which led to embryo transfer:
|
| ICSI |
| Kea et al. (2007) [53] | Prospective randomized study | Evaluation of the oxygen levels’ effect (5% CO2/5% O2/90% N2 or 5% CO2) on fertilization rates, embryo development and pregnancy outcomes in IVF patients | 1045 oocyte retrievals from 106 patients:
|
| IVF/ICSI/IVF and ICSI (combination) |
| Kovacic et al. (2008) [55] | Prospective randomized study | Effect of different oxygen levels (5% O2 or 20% O2) on sibling oocyte development until the blastocyst stage and evaluation of fertilization rate and the ratio of optimal embryos and blastocysts | 785 cumulus–oocyte complexes (COCs) in the IVF group:
|
| IVF/ICSI |
| Ciray et al. (2009) [64] | Prospective randomized study | Evaluation of the oxygen levels’ effect (6% CO2/5% O2/89% N2 or 5% CO2/20% O2) on embryo qualities and blastocyst status | 75 oocyte retrieval cycles including 2061 oocytes, 74 of which led to embryo transfer:
|
| ICSI |
| Meintjes et al. (2009) [54] | Prospective randomized study | Impact of low oxygen levels (5% O2) on pregnancy rates | 230 patients undergoing IVF or ICSI: 115 control group (20% O2). 115 group (5% O2). |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Waldenstrom et al. (2009) [60] | Prospective randomized study | Effect of different oxygen levels (5% O2 vs. 19% O2) on birth rate | 396 patients: 197 patients for culture under 5% O2. 199 patients for culture under 19% O2. |
| IVF |
| Nanassy et al. (2010) [56] | Retrospective study | Impact of oxygen levels’ shift (5% O2 and 20% O2) on embryo quality, implantation and pregnancy rate between the 3rd and the 5th day | 382 patients (until the 3rd day all cultures under 20% O2): 189 patients for culture under 5% O2 (after the 3rd day). 193 patients for culture under 20% O2 (after the 3rd day). |
| IVF |
| Kovacic et al. (2010) [62] | Prospective randomized study | Impact of embryo culture under different oxygen levels (6% CO2/5% O2/89% N2 or 6% CO2/20% O2) on the ICSI outcome | 647 patients: 326 patients for culture under 5% O2. 321 patients for culture under 20% O2. |
| ICSI |
| Sepulveda et al. (2011) [59] | Prospective randomized study | Comparison between embryo culture under 5% O2 or 20% O2 | 100 oocyte donation receivers randomized for culture under 5% O2 or 20% O2 |
| IVF (not directly mentioned) |
| Sobrinho et al. (2011) [70] | Meta-analysis | Effect of low oxygen levels on fertilization, implantation and pregnancy rates | 7 included studies: Dumoulin et al.(1999) [51], Bahceci et al. (2005) [61], Kea et al. (2007) [53], Kovacic et al. (2008) [55], Ciray et al. (2009) [64], Meintjes et al. (2009) [54] and Kovacic et al. (2010) [62]. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Bontekoe et al. (2012) [71] | Review with quantitative synthesis | Assessment of 5% O2 levels on IVF- and ICSI-related parameters | 1382 patients from 4 included studies: Kovacic et al. (2008) [55], Meintjes et al. (2009) [54], Sepulveda et al. (2011) [59] and Waldestrom et al. (2011) [60]. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| de los Santos MJ et al. (2013) [52] | Prospective randomized study | Evaluation of oxygen levels (5.5% CO2/6% O2/88.5% N2 or 5.5% CO2/20% O2) on ongoing pregnancies from oocyte donation cycles | 564 cycles under 6% O2. 561 cycles under 20% O2. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Kasterstein et al. (2013) [63] | Prospective randomized study | Evaluation of different oxygen levels (5% O2 or 20% O2) on embryo development and clinical outcome (in cycles with more than 8 oocytes collected) | 258 patients. 3638 mature oocytes retrieved. 1833 incubated under 5% O2. 1805 sibling oocytes incubated under 20% O2. |
| ICSI |
| Paternot et al. (2013) [65] | 2 randomized controlled trials | Assessment of embryo incubation in a mini-incubator or a conventional incubator and effect of different oxygen levels (5% O2 and 20% O2) on embryo quality | 395 embryos in each group |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Peng ZF et al. (2015) [57] | Randomized study | Evaluation of different oxygen levels on fertilization rates, implantation rates, pregnancy rates, multiple pregnancies and miscarriages | 3484 IVF and ICSI cycles: 1131 cycles cultured under 5% CO2 and 20% O2. 1258 cycles cultured at first under 5% CO2 and 20% O2 and after the 2nd day under 5% O2/5% CO2/90% N2 until the 3rd day. 1095 cycles cultured under 5% O2/5% CO2/90% N2. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Nastri et al. (2016) [72] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluation of different oxygen levels on embryo cultures | 21 included studies |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Van Montfoort et al. (2020) [58] | Cohort study | Assessment of different oxygen levels’ potential involvement in embryo utilization, IVF success rates and birthweight | 871 patients. 195 cycles in the group under 5% O2 (1627 oocytes). 676 cycles in the group under 20% O2 (5448 oocytes). |
| IVF or IVF/ICSI |
| Ruíz et al. (2020) [66] | Prospective randomized controlled trial | Assessment of the embryo culture under low oxygen levels (5% O2) in benchtop incubator on embryo-related parameters | 148 patients: 73 patients in the control group culture under 20% O2 and in large box-incubators. 75 patients in the study group (culture under 5% O2 and in benchtop incubators). |
| IVF |
| Gelo et al. (2019) [67] | Prospective randomized controlled trial | Evaluation of embryo culture under 5% O2 in a benchtop incubator or 20% O2 in a classic incubator on embryo-related and clinical parameters | 393 patients: 198 patients in the 5% O2 group. 195 patients in the 20% O2 group. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Li et al. (2022) [68] | Randomized study | Assessment of ultra-low (2%) oxygen levels on embryo development and clinical parameters | 2298 oocytes from 152 patients |
| IVF |
| Fawzy et al. (2017) [69] | Comparative study | Evaluation of low oxygen levels (3.5% O2) on embryo development and clinical parameters | 6024 oocytes from 558 patients: 3290 oocytes from 293 patients in the 3.5% O2 group. 2734 oocytes from 265 patients in the 5% O2 group. |
| ICSI |
| Yang et al. (2016) [73] | Comparative study | Assessment of different oxygen levels (2% O2, 5% O2 and 20% O2) on embryo cultures until the blastocyst stage | 155 embryos from 21 couples (120 finally included): 46 embryos in the 2% O2 group. 44 embryos in the 5% O2 group. 30 embryos in the 20% O2 group. |
| IVF |
| Kaser et al. (2018) [74] | Randomized controlled trial | Assessment of human preimplantation embryos’ culture under 2% O2 or 5% O2 | 203 zygotes: 102 zygotes for culture under 5% O2 for both periods (days 1 to 3 and days 3 to 5). 101 zygotes for culture under 5% O2 for days 1 to 3 and under 2% O2 for days 3 to 5. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| De Munck et al. (2019) [75] | 2 prospective randomized controlled trial | Evaluation of the shift in oxygen concentration from 5% to 2% after the 3rd day on blastocyst parameters | 1811 embryos (direct exposure). 405 embryos for culture under 2% O2. 406 embryos for culture under 5% O2. 1144 embryos (gradual exposure). 572 embryos for culture under 2% O2. 572 embryos for culture under 5% O2. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Brouillet et al. (2021) [76] | Monocentric retrospective observational study | Evaluation of oxygen levels’ shift from 5% to 2% on embryo-related and clinical parameters | 120 couples. (1st IVF cycle with embryo culture under 5% O2 and 2nd IVF cycle with embryo culture under 5% O2 for the first 3 days and then under 2% O2 for days 3 to 5/6.) |
| IVF |
| Li et al. (2022) [77] | Comparative study | Evaluation of oxygen levels’ shift from 5% to 2% in embryo-related and clinical parameters. | 510 embryos from 188 patients: 296 embryos from 106 patients for culture under 5% O2 after the 3rd day until the 5th or the 6th day. 214 embryos from 82 patients for culture under 2% O2 after the 3rd day until the 5th or the 6th day. |
| IVF/ICSI |
| Patel et al. (2023) [78] | Retrospective cross-sectional study | Assessment of low (5% O2) and ultra-low (2% O2) oxygen levels on embryo-related and clinical parameters | 382 patients; 206 embryos for culture under 2% O2. 176 embryos for culture under 5% O2. |
| IVF |
| Herbemont et al. (2021) [79] | Randomized controlled trial | Evaluation of the oxygen levels’ importance according to the embryo’s developmental stage | 773 IVF/ICSI cycles: 265 cycles in culture under 20% O2 and after the 2nd day, culture of the available good-quality embryos in 88 cycles under 20% O2. 508 cycles in culture under 5% O2, after the 2nd day either culture until the 6th day for 195 cycles or shift of the oxygen levels to 20% O2 until the 6th day for 94 cycles. |
| IVF/ICSI |
6. Conclusions
The cultures under low or high oxygen levels have been extensively investigated either in embryos of various mammal species or human embryos. The hasty conclusion from the animal studies is that the culture in low oxygen levels, instead of the culture in atmospheric oxygen levels, offers advantages in embryo development. However, the optimal low oxygen levels vary by species. As for human embryos, most of the studies compared 5% to 20% oxygen levels. Although the quality of the evidence is not good, as the meta-analysis of Nastri et al. [72] indicates, all the relevant studies, with the exception of one [64], showed that the culture under low oxygen levels is, to some extent, beneficial for human embryos. Nevertheless, no study to date could confirm any benefit for embryos, implantation or pregnancy rates related to the use of atmospheric oxygen levels in the human embryo culture in comparison to the culture under 5–6% oxygen levels. The biphasic oxygen concentration strategy (5% in the first three days and 2% afterwards) appears as an interesting and promising method, though additional studies are needed in order to confirm its value.
In conclusion, the currently available evidence does not support the culture of human embryos under atmospheric conditions. The higher cost related to cultures under 5% or 2% O2 cannot be considered as a reason for not adopting the culture under low oxygen tension.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, B.A.; writing—original draft preparation, O.K. and T.P.; review and editing, A.Z., C.S. and S.S.; supervision, B.A.; project administration, B.A. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
No new data were created.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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