Webinar: Non-Invasive Assays for Human Embryos: Deciphering Differences from Small Signals
Denny Sakkas, PhD, Boston IVD, Quanterix/Boston IVF
31 October 2013

Topic:   Non-Invasive Assays for Human Embryos: Deciphering Differences from Small Signals Session dates:   Tuesday, November 12, 2013 Starting time:   11:30 am, Eastern Standard Time (New York, GMT-05:00) Duration:   1 hour Presenters:   Denny Sakkas,David Duffy Description:   Non-Invasive Assays for Human Embryos: Deciphering Differences from Small Signals  Sponsored by Quanterix Corporation 
Presenters:  Denny Sakkas, Ph.D., Scientific Director, Boston IVF  David Duffy, Ph.D., Vice President, Research and Chief Technology Officer, Quanterix Corporation 

The percentage of babies born from Assisted Reproduction Techniques or In Vitro Fertilization in many countries is now between 2%-6%. One major issue is that many of the pregnancies are twins or triplets, which can lead to complications for both the mother and infants. The twins and triplets occur because multiple embryos are created using these procedures and 2 or more embryos are replaced back to the mother so as to increase the chances of pregnancy. Being able to identify which single embryo is the one that will lead to a pregnancy would allow us to safely transfer one embryo. During In Vitro Fertilization embryos are grown individually in small microliter droplets of culture media for several days and produce numerous factors which if diagnosed could provide information as to which individual embryo was the most viable. The Single Molecule Array (Simoa) technology and its ability to quantify low abundance protein biomarkers may provide the non-invasive assay capable of identifying these individual embryos. 


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