Oocytes from small antral follicles (< 3 mm in diameter; SAFO) show lower developmental competence compared to those from medium antral follicles (3-8 mm in diameter; MAFO) in pigs. This study was designed to evaluate the effect of various macromolecules such as fetal bovine serum (FBS), porcine follicular fluid (PFF), bovine serum albumin (BSA) and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) in in vitro growth (IVG) medium on oocyte growth, maturation, and embryonic development after parthenogenesis (PA). The base medium for IVG was α-MEM supplemented with dibutyryl cyclic AMP, pyruvate, kanamycin, hormone. This medium was further supplemented with 10% FBS, 10% PFF, 0.4% BSA, or 0.1% PVA. The in vitro maturation (IVM) medium was medium-199 supplemented with 10% PFF, cysteine, pyruvate, epidermal growth factor, kanamycin, insulin, and hormones. SAFO were cultured for 2 days for IVG and then cultured for 44 h for IVM. After IVG, the mean diameter of SAFO treated with FBS, PVA, and no IVG-MAFO (114.1, 113.0, and 114.8 μm, respectively) was significantly larger (P<0.01) than that of no IVG-SAF (111.8 μm). Oocyte diameter after IVM was greater (P<0.01) in SAFO treated with FBS, BSA and PVA (112.8, 112.9 and 112.6 μm, respectively) than other groups (110.4, 109.6, and 109.8 μm for no IVG-MAFO, no IVG-SAFO and PFF, respectively). Intraoocyte GSH content was not influenced by the macromolecules in IVG medium (0.92, 0.93, 1.05, and 1.12 pixels/oocyte for FBS, PFF, BSA and PVA, respectively). The proportion of oocytes reached the metaphase II stage was higher in PFF (73.6%) than in BSA (43.5%) and PVA (53.7%) but not different from that of FBS treatment (61.5%). The cumulus expansion score of oocytes after IVG was significantly influenced (P<0.01) by the macromolecules (2.94, 2.24, 1.84, and 1.38 for PFF, FBS, PVA, and BSA treatments, respectively). Blastocyst formation of PA oocytes that were treated with FBS (51.8%), PFF (50.4%), and PVA (45.2%) during IVG was higher (P<0.05) than that of BSA-treated oocytes (20.6%) but was not significantly different from that (54.8%) of no IVG-MAFO oocytes. Our results demonstrated that growth, maturation, and embryonic development of SAFO are greatly influenced by macromolecules in IVG medium and that PFF or FBS can be replaced with a chemically defined synthetic macromolecule PVA.