The Impact of Endometriosis on In Vitro Fertilization Outcome

Maedica (Bucur). 2022 Dec;17(4):757-761. doi: 10.26574/maedica.2022.17.4.757.

Abstract

Introduction:Endometriosis is a common inflammatory disease and a major cause of infertility through various mechanisms. Materials and method: We conducted a retrospective study in infertile women with endometriosis who underwent in vitro fertilization (IVF) in order to evaluate the particularities and outcome of ovarian stimulation. Results:A total of 59 patients aged 24-40 years were included. Clinical characteristics of the studied group revealed dysmenorrhea in 66.66% of cases, previous ovarian surgery in 57.89% and primary infertility in 78.94%. The most used protocol was the short one with antagonist (64.91%), followed by the long protocol with agonist (22.80%), and Dual-stim protocol (12.28%). The number of ovarian stimulation days varied between 8-14 days. The total number of oocytes obtained ranged between 0-12. Standard IVF was performed in 40.35% of cases and FIV-ICSI in 59.64% of cases; 78.94% of patients were able to obtain an embryo and blastocysts were obtained in 42.10% of cases. All patients aged under 35 obtained at least one viable embryo. Fresh or frozen single embryo transfer was furtherly performed with a day 3 embryo or a blastocyst. Fresh embryo transfer was mainly performed with day 3 embryos (60.46%). The overall biochemical pregnancy rate in the studied lot was 35.59%. The biochemical pregnancy rate was 40% in the group of patients aged under 35 and 35.13% in the group aged over 35 years. Conclusion:Women with endometriosis are a special category of poor ovarian response mainly due to the decline in ovarian reserve and inferior IVF results are expected due to a lower number of retrieved oocytes, lower fertilization rates, poor embryo quality and altered endometrial receptivity.

Publication types

  • Editorial