Influence of Tubal Patency on Endometriosis Recurrence: A Retrospective Matched Case-control Study

  • KU Leuven ROR
  • Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, AZ Delta Hospital, Roeselare, Belgium (Dr. Neutens). ROR
  • Leuven Institute for Fertility and Embryology ROR
  • Statistics Belgium ROR
  • Centre Hospitalier Interrégional Edith Cavell ROR

Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology

DOI 10.1016/j.jmig.2025.12.041 PMID 41490584

Abstract

STUDY

Objective

To study whether bilateral nonpatency of fallopian tubes is correlated with a lower recurrence rate of endometriosis.

Design

Retrospective 2:1 matched case-control study.

Setting

University hospital with a tertiary referral center for fertility and endometriosis surgery in Leuven, Belgium.

Patients

All patients undergoing complete laparoscopic excision of any revised system of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine-stage endometriosis between 2010 and 2014 (n = 896).

Interventions

Comparison between patients with bilateral nonpatent or absent fallopian tubes and matched controls with at least 1 patent fallopian tube. MEASUREMENTS AND

Main Results

Primary outcome was the recurrence rate, which was analyzed on 4 levels: overall recurrence, symptom recurrence, recurrence on imaging, and need for reintervention. Of 896 patients, 49 had bilateral nonpatent or absent fallopian tubes. These cases were compared with 98 matched controls with at least 1 patent fallopian tube. Symptoms recurred in 12.2% of the cases (n = 6) and 25.5% of the controls (n = 25) (p = .09). Recurrence was confirmed by imaging in 8% of the cases (n = 4) and 10.2% of the controls (n = 10) (p = .77). In 3 patients of the case group and 12 patients of the control group, there was a need for reintervention (p = .39). Within this subgroup, recurrence of endometriosis was histologically confirmed in none of the patients of the case group and 5 patients of the control group (p = .51).

Conclusion

This study did not observe a statistically significant reduction in endometriosis recurrence in patients with bilateral occlusion/absence of the fallopian tubes after endometriosis surgery. A type II error may count for this result.

Topics

tubal patency endometriosis recurrence fallopian tube occlusion, bilateral tubal nonpatency endometriosis recurrence rate, retrograde menstruation theory endometriosis tubal patency, endometriosis recurrence after laparoscopic excision surgery, fallopian tube absence endometriosis symptom recurrence, Tomassetti Meuleman endometriosis recurrence tubal patency Leuven, matched case-control endometriosis recurrence reintervention, complete laparoscopic excision endometriosis rASRM staging, tubal factor endometriosis pathophysiology retrograde menstruation, endometriosis recurrence imaging histological confirmation
PMID 41490584 41490584 DOI 10.1016/j.jmig.2025.12.041 10.1016/j.jmig.2025.12.041

Cite this article

Neutens, S., Vanhie, A., Van Elst, B., Laenen, A., Meuleman, C., & Tomassetti, C. (2026). Influence of Tubal Patency on Endometriosis Recurrence: A Retrospective Matched Case-control Study. *Journal of minimally invasive gynecology*. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmig.2025.12.041

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