NCT06497998

Brief Summary

While intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) has made significant progress in the treatment of male infertility, the cumulative delivery rate is less than 30%, and birth is sometimes only achieved after several transfers. This success rate, combined with the possibility of repeated transfer failures, causes great distress, impacting couples' personal, social, and professional lives. These failures also have a significant economic impact on society and assisted reproductive technologies (ART) laboratories, including costs related to personnel, consumables, and cryopreservation activities. Among the factors influencing the success of ICSI, the quality of the oocyte is paramount. Identifying mature oocytes with high birth potential is therefore a crucial step in any attempt. At present, oocyte selection is mainly based on subjective visual morphological criteria, primarily limited to the stage of meiotic maturation. Various objective selection criteria are currently being tested, such as markers in follicular fluid or the transcriptome of cumulus and granulosa cells. Mechanical oocyte characterization is another objective approach to assessing oocyte quality. EGG Sensor is a reliable, cost-effective platform that measures forces ranging from a few nanonewtons to a few micronewtons in a liquid medium on living cells. It enables the characterization of the mechanical behavior of oocytes (kinetic measurements of forces resulting from EGG sensor action). The EGG sensor has been evaluated, enabling the EGG platform to be duplicated at the ART center of the Besançon University Hospital, making measurement and calibration more reliable, and allowing for the characterization of a series of oocytes excluded from the ICSI procedure. The preclinical stages in the development of the EGG sensor have thus been validated. The next stage of development is to validate the device in an operational environment. The aim of this pilot study is to evaluate the mechanical qualification of oocytes by the EGG sensor in real-life conditions during an ICSI-type ART attempt.

Trial Health

65
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Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
20

participants targeted

Target at below P25 for not_applicable

Timeline
16mo left

Started Sep 2024

Typical duration for not_applicable

Status
not yet recruiting

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

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Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

Study Progress57%
Sep 2024Sep 2027

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

June 27, 2024

Completed
15 days until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

July 12, 2024

Completed
2 months until next milestone

Study Start

First participant enrolled

September 1, 2024

Completed
3 years until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

September 1, 2027

Expected
Same day until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

September 1, 2027

Last Updated

July 12, 2024

Status Verified

June 1, 2024

Enrollment Period

3 years

First QC Date

June 27, 2024

Last Update Submit

July 5, 2024

Conditions

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (4)

  • Differences in the global elasticity of the oocyte depending on whether or not it results in a live birth.

    Global elasticity obtained from a loading and unloading test at constant speed using a large flat shape to compress it. The output is a curve related to the force applied to the oocyte versus the indentation depth. This curve is representative of the global oocyte elasticity.

    36 months

  • Differences in the global viscosity behaviour of the oocyte depending on whether or not it results in a live birth

    Global viscosity behaviour obtained from a loading test at constant speed followed by keeping the indentation depth. In this test, we are also using the large flat shape of indenter tip.The output is a curve related to the force applied to the oocyte versus time that quantify the global relaxation phenomenon of the oocyte.

    36 months

  • Differences in the local elasticity of the oocyte depending on whether or not it results in a live birth

    Local elasticity obtained from a loading and unloading test at constant speed using a sharp shape in order to specifically characterize pellucid membrane. The output is a curve related to the force applied to the oocyte versus the indentation depth. This curve is representative of the pellucide membrane elasticity.

    36 months

  • Differences in the local viscosity of the pellucid membrane depending on whether or not it results in a live birth

    Local viscosity behaviour of the pellucid membrane obtained from a loading test at constant speed followed by keeping the indentation depth. In this test, we are also using the sharp shape of indenter tip.The output is a curve related to the force applied to the oocyte versus time that mainly quantify the local relaxation phenomenon of the pellucid membrane.

    36 months

Secondary Outcomes (10)

  • Differences in the mechanical characterization of an oocyte depending on whether or not it results in an early or late miscarriage.

    36 months

  • Differences in the mechanical characterization of an oocyte depending on whether or not it results in a clinical pregnancy.

    36 months

  • Differences in the mechanical characterization of an oocyte depending on whether or not it results in a biochemical pregnancy.

    36 months

  • Morphological characterization of mature oocytes (included in the ICSI procedure) and of abnormal or immature oocytes (excluded from the ICSI procedure).

    On the day the IVF with ICSI is performed

  • Mechanical characterization of abnormal or immature oocytes (excluded from the ICSI procedure) from the same cohort.

    On the day the IVF with ICSI is performed

  • +5 more secondary outcomes

Study Arms (2)

EGG sensor

EXPERIMENTAL

Mechanical characterization is performed using a glass indenter that applies a load to the oocyte. The indenter is a sterile, single-use, blunt-edged glass cylinder with a flat support end featuring a small foam formation, approximately the diameter of a micropipette. Except for the mechanical characterization, all oocytes are managed similarly according to validated procedures: in the same location, under the same metrological constraints (temperature and pH (potential of hydrogen) monitoring), and are handled by the same competent ART personnel.

Device: Mechanical characterization

Standard

NO INTERVENTION

Usual ICSI procedures

Interventions

The oocyte is placed in a culture dish with IVF culture medium. This procedure is similar to that used in the ICSI procedure, except that the injection pipette is replaced by a glass indenter. The indenter (sterile, single-use, blunt-edged glass cylinder, L:16mm, ø:0.85mm, mass:8mg) is completely decoupled from the micromanipulation and microinjection platform and driven by the principle of a magnetic spring with negative stiffness. The oocyte is immobilized using a restraining pipette to prevent unwanted movement during measurement. The main objective is to investigate the prognostic value of parameters derived from kinetic measurements of microforces on mature human oocytes in the context of IVF with ICSI. On each oocyte the mechanical testing is divided in 4 successive loading unloading phase to measure: * global elasticity of the oocyte. * global viscosity behaviour of the oocyte. * local elasticity of the oocyte. * local viscosity behaviour of the pellucid membrane.

EGG sensor

Eligibility Criteria

Age18 Years - 43 Years
Sexfemale
Healthy VolunteersNo
Age GroupsAdult (18-64)

You may qualify if:

  • women between 18 and 43 years old.
  • Candidates for in vitro fertilization with ICSI treatment
  • Male infertility (with the exception of testicular sperm extraction (TESA or MESA), donation of sperm and oocytes).
  • Normal mobility and morphology of sperm selected for ICSI.
  • Agreement given by the multidisciplinary team of the ART center (patients considered to have a "good prognosis" at the conclusion of the meeting, with normal ovarian reserve (follicular count between 15 and 25), and candidates for single embryo transfer.
  • Consenting to the EGG sensor examination of 50% of mature oocytes collected.
  • Signed informed consent.
  • Affiliated to the French social security system (including CMU).

You may not qualify if:

  • age \< 18 years
  • age \> 43 years
  • Infertility of female origin (severe endometriosis, genetic origin, uterine malformations that may interfere with implantation, etc.).
  • Opposition of the multidisciplinary team of the ART center and/or patients with poor or average prognosis at the conclusion of the multidisciplinary ART meeting.
  • Person under legal protection and/or unlikely to cooperate with the study and/or poor cooperation anticipated by the investigator
  • Subject without health insurance

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

MeSH Terms

Conditions

Infertility

Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)

Genital DiseasesUrogenital Diseases

Central Study Contacts

Christophe Roux, MD, PhD

CONTACT

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
not applicable
Allocation
NON RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Purpose
OTHER
Intervention Model
PARALLEL
Sponsor Type
OTHER
Responsible Party
SPONSOR

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

June 27, 2024

First Posted

July 12, 2024

Study Start

September 1, 2024

Primary Completion (Estimated)

September 1, 2027

Study Completion (Estimated)

September 1, 2027

Last Updated

July 12, 2024

Record last verified: 2024-06

Data Sharing

IPD Sharing
Will share

Individual participant data that underlie the results reported in the article, after deidentification (text, tables, figures, and appendices).

Shared Documents
STUDY PROTOCOL, ICF
Time Frame
Immediately following publication. No end date
Access Criteria
Researchers who submit a methodologically sound proposal approved by our research team