Pelvic inflammatory disease and fertility. A cohort study of 1,844 women with laparoscopically verified disease and 657 control women with normal laparoscopic results

Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 19(4), 185-192, 1992

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Abstract

From 1960 10 1984, 2,501 women underwent diagnostic laparoscopy (index laparoscopy) because of a clinical suspicion of acute pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Of these women, 1,844 had abnormal laparoscopic findings (patients) and 657 had normal findings (control subjects). The reproductive events after index laparoscopy of 1,732 patients and 601 control subjects were followed. The patients and control subjects were followed for a total of 13,400 and 3,958 woman-years, respectively. During the follow-up period, 1,309 (75.6%) of the patients and 451 (75.0%) of the control subjects attempted to conceive. Of these women, 209 (16.0%) of the patients and 12 (2.7%) of the control subjects failed to conceive. A total of 141 (10.8%) of the patients and 0 (0%) of the control subjects had confirmed tubal factor infertility, 21 (1.6%) of the patients and 3 (0.7%) control subjects had other causes of infertility, and 47 (3.6%) patients and 9 (2.0%) control subjects did not have a complete infertility evaluation. Additional information on tubal morphology (hysterosalpingography, laparoscopy, or laparotomy) in women from couples for whom evaluation was incomplete indicated that 165 (12.2%) patients and 4 (0.9%) of the control subjects had abnormal tubal function or morphology after index laparoscopy. Tubal factor infertility after PID was associated with number and severity of PID episodes. The ectopic pregnancy rate for first pregnancy after index laparoscopy was 9.1% among the patients and 1.4% among control subjects.

Topics

pelvic inflammatory disease tubal factor infertility cohort, PID laparoscopically verified fertility outcomes, Weström pelvic inflammatory disease infertility long-term follow-up, PID episodes severity tubal infertility risk, ectopic pregnancy after pelvic inflammatory disease, laparoscopic diagnosis PID reproductive outcomes, sexually transmitted disease infertility tubal damage, recurrent PID cumulative infertility risk, tubal morphology hysterosalpingography after PID, PID prevention fertility preservation cohort study

Cite this article

Weström, L., Joesoef, R. M., Reynolds, G. H., Hagdu, A., & Thompson, S. E. (1992). Pelvic inflammatory disease and fertility. A cohort study of 1,844 women with laparoscopically verified disease and 657 control women with normal laparoscopic results. *Sexually transmitted diseases*, *19*(4), 185-192.

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