PGT-A contamination, sometimes reported as “no result,” is poorly studied, but a 2026 study found it’s rare and that undetected contamination can distort PGT results, highlighting the importance of contamination detection in testing.
Researchers in a 2023 study combined the results of 74 studies to investigate what factors contribute to euploid live birth and miscarriage rates, identifying embryo quality, maternal age, specific diagnoses, repeat freeze/thaw, and other factors.
Small studies find that some chaotic embryos can be euploid after PGT-A rebiopsy, while a case report details a live birth after the transfer of a chaotic embryo.
This post covers PGT-A (formerly called PGS testing), including how it works, how accurate it is, whether it can damage embryos, how to read PGT-A reports, success rates, mosaic embryos, and why even euploid embryos sometimes fail.