The limited value of hysterosalpingography in assessing tubal status and fertility potential

Fertility and sterility, 63(6), 1167-1171

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)57591-8 PMID 7750583 Source

Abstract

Design

To determine whether the diagnostic accuracy and prognostic value of hysterosalpingography (HSG) could be improved if routine spot films were replaced by an on-line recorded gynecoradiologic study.

Setting

Medical school-affiliated private infertility center.

Patients

In 1992, a review of 152 infertile women with infertility who demonstrated a normal HSG, by standard criteria of spot film evaluation, in 117 (77%). They were further investigated by gynecoradiologic study if the HSG revealed asymmetrical tubal filling, an increased perfusion pressure, and/or evidence for abnormal tubal spill. In 1993, 47 women with normal HSG by spot film criteria underwent bilateral selective salpingography and were subdivided into those with normal (group I, n = 23) and abnormal (group II, n = 24) tubal perfusion pressures.

Intervention

Patients in both study groups then were treated for their infertility independently of pressure perfusion measurements.

Main outcome measure

Clinical pregnancy rates (PRs) over the ensuing 6 to 10 months.

Results

Among 117 women with apparently normal spot film HSG, 64 (55%) demonstrated asymmetrical tubal filling, 32 (27%) demonstrated abnormal spillage into the peritoneal cavity, and 55 (47%) demonstrated abnormally elevated injection pressures. Among 98 women who underwent bilateral selective salpingography, 43 (44%) demonstrated bilaterally normal tubal perfusion pressures and 55 (56%) showed an abnormally elevated pressure in at least one oviduct. Of 47 women that were followed prospectively in 1993, patients with normal perfusion pressure (group I) demonstrated a significantly higher PR than women with elevated tubal pressure (group II) from 2 months and on after the procedure.

Conclusions

Routine spot film HSG is of limited value in assessing tubal status beyond the determination of tubal patency. Especially with regard to fertility potential, HSG should be replaced by gynecoradiologic study.

Topics

hysterosalpingogram accuracy, tubal patency testing, hsg false negative results, selective salpingography, tubal perfusion pressure, infertility workup imaging, fallopian tube blockage diagnosis, tubal factor infertility evaluation, gynecoradiologic study fertility, hsg vs laparoscopy tubal assessment, abnormal tubal spillage, tubal injection pressure fertility

Cite this article

Karande, V. C., Pratt, D. E., Rabin, D. S., & Gleicher, N. (1995). The limited value of hysterosalpingography in assessing tubal status and fertility potential. *Fertility and sterility*, *63*(6), 1167-1171. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)57591-8

Related articles