![The Paulus Protocol is an established acupuncture treatment given before and after embryo transfer](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/d322170ba5384cabb8c4c283e3ad6b71.jpg/v1/fill/w_980,h_653,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_auto/d322170ba5384cabb8c4c283e3ad6b71.jpg)
Between 2015 and 2019 I provided acupuncture for the Hewitt Fertility Centre at their Knutsford Clinic. I wrote this blog for them in 2016 when it was published on their website. At the time, I had just given a talk to their Patient Support Group.
Patient Support Blog: Reasons to consider acupuncture during your IVF treatment
New patients to the Hewitt Fertility Centre receive an information pack containing various leaflets and booklets detailing all they may encounter whilst seeking to achieve their aim of parenthood. Amongst this paper trail of detail is one leaflet that, for me at least, stands out, as much for possibly seeming anachronistic; it’s the leaflet entitled “Acupuncture, Supporting you & your IVF programme”. How does a millennia old practice with its roots in traditional East Asian medicine fit with one of the pinnacles of modern medical science? I often wonder what patients make of the juxtaposition of two practices that on the face of it are so far apart.
It was with this in mind that I prepared my recent talk to the Patient Support Group at the Hewitt’s centre in Knutsford. Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has much to say about both men and womens’ health as well as fertility in particular yet to appreciate what it recommends requires a level of understanding of the models of health it is based upon. For me, to interpret acupuncture from a modern, scientific basis has two difficulties; it ignores the cultural and historical context of the models plus it is attempting to apply an inappropriate system of understanding. It’s a bit like trying to establish directions from location A to B when you only know the way from C to B. What does interest me is research into where acupuncture produces results and this is where supporting fertility with acupuncture has shown to be of value.
When treating more everyday conditions with acupuncture there is flexibility around frequency of treatment and applicability of lifestyle advice dependent upon the nature of the ailment. Acupuncture at the Hewitt Fertility Centre often presents a different situation; acupuncture is being presented at an advanced stage of treatment, often within the last month or two. What then do I, as an acupuncturist seek to do? There are three main priorities:
To treat the effects of the medication
To support the patient emotionally
To continue to address any underlying TCM pathology
So when you look at the Treatment booklet for Patients and Carers it tells you that with the down regulation drugs you may experience headaches, hot flushes and mood swings; that the ovarian stimulation injections may lead to patients experiencing abdominal swelling and bloating. Whilst TCM doesn’t have a concept of down regulation or ovarian stimulation it has various interpretations of headaches, hot flushes, mood swings and bloating which can be used effectively in these circumstances, utilising the TCM interpretation of the patients underlying health. In this way we tailor the acupuncture treatment to the patient; it is rare that an acupuncturist follows a set protocol although there are one or two exceptions.
One exception where a protocol is used is in practice here at the Hewitt Centre and the reason is that it is research led. In 2002 a research paper was published on what has become known as the Paulus Protocol (1), detailing a prospective randomised controlled trial seeking to determine whether acupuncture improves the clinical pregnancy rate after IVF or ICSI treatment. The acupuncture group received a set acupuncture treatment prior to and after the embryo treatment; the analysis shows that the pregnancy rate for the acupuncture group was considerably higher than the control group i.e. clinical pregnancies were documented in 34 of 80 patients (42.5%) in the acupuncture group, compared to 26.3% (21 out of 80 patients) in the control group. At the Hewitt Fertility Centre, those patients requesting acupuncture at the time of embryo transfer receive the same protocol as that used in the study.
This type of research has the great advantage that pregnancy is a purely objective outcome leaving less room for distracting debate about placebo effects; an embryo transfer either leads to pregnancy or it doesn’t. A later systematic review and meta-analysis(2) published in 2008 brought together a range of findings to conclude that “acupuncture increased the odds of clinical pregnancy by 65% compared to control groups” and that whilst this could be an overestimate argued these were still “clinically relevant benefits”. Many patients find this a compelling reason to have acupuncture during their treatment at the Hewitt.
The patients I see at the Hewitt’s Knutsford Clinic choose to do so for a number of reasons: some are seeking relaxation, some support during their treatment; others have read about this type of research on the various forums available on the internet whilst others have benefitted from acupuncture before. Whatever your motivation to choose acupuncture rest assured the acupuncturists at both Knutsford and Liverpool are all members of the British Acupuncture Council and specialise in supporting fertility treatment programmes.
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