4.7 Article

The effect of different hormone therapies on integrin expression and pinopode formation in the human endometrium:: a controlled study

Journal

HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 683-693

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/humrep/deg177

Keywords

endometrium; hormone treatment; implantation; integrins; pinopodes

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BACKGROUND: Integrin expression and pinopode formation have been proposed as a means of distinguishing receptive endometrium from non-receptive in clinical practice, thus offering new directions for the development of contraceptive approaches targeted to the endometrium as well as a better understanding of occult causes of infertility in women. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of ovulation induction, oral contraception, treatment with dehydrogesterone, and different regimens of hormone replacement therapy on endometrial alphavbeta3 integrin expression and pinopode, formation using a prospective, controlled study design. METHODS: Histological dating, alphavbeta3 integrin expression and pinopode formation were evaluated in control and treated cycles in six groups of women including eight subjects per group and who received clomiphene citrate, ovarian stimulation for IVF, oral contraception, dehydrogesterone for endometrial luteal phase defect, or two different regimens of hormone replacement therapy. Twelve healthy fertile women served as a general control group. RESULTS: alphavbeta3 integrin expression and pinopode formation in the human endometrium were closely related to endometrial maturation as defined by histological dating and this was irrespective of endometria being in-phase or out-of-phase and the hormonal treatment received. Only for clomiphene citrate did a direct effect with reduction in pinopode formation in the midluteal phase seem to exist. CONCLUSION: alphavbeta3 integrin expression and pinopode formation in the human endometrium are processes closely related to endometrial maturation and this is irrespective of endometria being in-phase or out-of-phase and the hormonal treatment received. The potential usefulness of those two so-called endometrial markers of implantation as targets for contraceptive approaches or fertility-promoting strategies seems unlikely.

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