Endometriosis, especially mild disease: a risk factor for miscarriages

  • University Hospital of Bern ROR
  • University of Bern ROR
  • Spitäler Schaffhausen ROR
  • University Hospital of Zurich ROR
  • Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin ROR
  • University of St. Gallen ROR
  • Department of Psychosomatics, Charité University Hospital Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
  • Triemli Hospital ROR
  • RWTH Aachen University ROR

Fertility and Sterility, 108(5), 806-814.e2

DOI 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2017.08.025 PMID 29079275

Abstract

Objective

To investigate the prevalence of miscarriage in women with endometriosis (WwE) compared with disease-free control women (CW).

Design

Cross-sectional analysis nested in a retrospective observational study (n = 940).

Setting

Hospitals and associated private practices. PATIENT(S): Previously pregnant women (n = 268) within reproductive age in matched pairs. INTERVENTION(S): Retrospective analysis of surgical reports and self-administered questionnaires. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Rate of miscarriage, subanalysis for fertility status (≤12 vs. >12 months' time to conception), endometriosis stages (revised American Society of Reproductive Medicine classification [rASRM] I/II vs. III/IV) and phenotypic localizations (superficial peritoneal, ovarian, and deep infiltrating endometriosis). RESULT(S): The miscarriage rate was higher in WwE (35.8% [95% confidence interval 29.6%-42.0%]) compared with CW (22.0% [16.7%-27.0%]); adjusted incidence risk ratio of 1.97 (95% CI 1.41-2.75). This remained significant in subfertile WwE (50.0% [40.7%-59.4%]) vs. CW (25.8% [8.5%-41.2%]) but not in fertile WwE (24.5% [16.3%-31.6%]) vs. CW (21.5% [15.9%-26.8%]). The miscarriage rate was higher in women with milder forms (rASRM I/II 42.1% [32.6%-51.4%] vs. rASRM III/IV 30.8% [22.6%-38.7%], compared with 22.0% [16.7%-27.0%] in CW), and in women with superficial peritoneal endometriosis (42.0% [32.0%-53.9%]) compared with ovarian endometriosis (28.6% [17.7%-38.7%]) and deep infiltrating endometriosis (33.9% [21.2%-46.0%]) compared with CW (22.0% [16.7%-27.0%]). CONCLUSION(S): Mild endometriosis, as in superficial lesions, is related to a great extent of inflammatory disorder, possibly leading to defective folliculogenesis, fertilization, and/or implantation, presenting as increased risk of miscarriage. CLINICAL

Trial Registration Number

NCT02511626.

Topics

endometriosis miscarriage risk cross-sectional study, mild endometriosis superficial peritoneal recurrent pregnancy loss, endometriosis stage rASRM miscarriage rate subfertility, Kohl Schwartz Leeners endometriosis miscarriage, superficial peritoneal endometriosis inflammatory implantation failure, deep infiltrating endometriosis vs mild pregnancy outcomes, endometriosis folliculogenesis fertilization implantation defects, ovarian endometriosis pregnancy loss risk comparison, endometriosis subfertility time to conception miscarriage, minimal mild endometriosis reproductive outcomes inflammation
PMID 29079275 29079275 DOI 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2017.08.025 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2017.08.025

Cite this article

Kohl Schwartz, A. S., Wölfler, M. M., Mitter, V., Rauchfuss, M., Haeberlin, F., Eberhard, M., von Orelli, S., Imthurn, B., Imesch, P., Fink, D., & Leeners, B. (2017). Endometriosis, especially mild disease: a risk factor for miscarriages. *Fertility and sterility*, *108*(5), 806-814.e2. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2017.08.025

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