4.6 Article

New biopsy after antibiotic treatment: effect on outcomes of assisted reproduction in patients with infertility and chronic endometritis

Journal

REPRODUCTIVE BIOMEDICINE ONLINE
Volume 45, Issue 6, Pages 1167-1175

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rbmo.2022.07.020

Keywords

Antibiotic therapy; Chronic endometritis; Endometrial biopsy; Pregnancy outcome

Funding

  1. Guangdong Province Weiji Medical Develop's Fund [K-202104-2]

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This study aimed to investigate the effect of chronic endometritis on infertile patients, comparing pregnancy outcomes between groups positive and negative for chronic endometritis. The results showed that doxycycline treatment and re-examination had no effect on pregnancy outcomes.
Research question: What is the effect of chronic endometritis on patients with infertility, the necessity of endometrial re-examination and the effect of improving chronic endometritis after one cycle of antibiotic treatment on pregnancy outcomes?Design: Infertile patients (n = 4003) who underwent IVF and intracytoplasmic sperm injection treatment were included. Pregnancy outcomes of groups positive for chronic endometritis were compared with groups that were negative (group 1). Patients that were positive were divided into the chronic endometritis new biopsy group (group 2) and chronic endometritis non-re-examination group (group 3). After doxycycline treatment and re-examination, the chronic endometritis new biopsy group was divided into improved chronic endometritis group (ICE) and not-improved chronic endometritis group (NICE), and their general indicators and reproductive outcomes were compared.Results: No significant difference was observed in embryo implantation, early or late pregnancy loss, ectopic pregnancy, clinical pregnancy and live birth rates between groups 2 and 3. The clinical pregnancy and live birth rates in the NICE group were significantly lower than those in the ICE group (P = 0.008 and P = 0.001, respectively). After controlling for potential confounding factors, age, average number of high-quality embryos, endometrial thickness on the day of embryo transfer and number and type of embryo transfer were factors associated with live birth rates.Conclusions: Endometrial re-examination of women with chronic endometritis treated with doxycycline had no effect on pregnancy outcomes. The first cycle of doxycycline treatment could effectively improve reproductive outcomes of women with five or more CD138+ cells/high-power field.

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