Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology (Oct 2011)

Site-specific endometrial injury improves implantation and pregnancy in patients with repeated implantation failures

  • Lin Chieh,
  • Wang Mei,
  • Wang Hsin-Shih,
  • Soong Yung-Kuei,
  • Wang Chin-Jung,
  • Huang Shang,
  • Chang Chia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7827-9-140
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 140

Abstract

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Abstract Background To test whether a site-specific hysteroscopic biopsy-induced injury in the endometrium during the controlled ovarian hyperstimulation cycle improves subsequent embryo implantation in patients with repeated implantation failure, a total of 30 patients who have had good responses to controlled ovulation stimulation but have failed to achieve pregnancy after two or more transfers of good-quality embryos were recruited in this prospective study. Methods A single, site-specific hysteroscopic biopsy-induced injury was generated on the posterior endometrium at midline 10-15 mm from the fundus during the D4-D7 period of the ongoing controlled ovarian hyperstimulation cycle in six patients. Results Patients received endometrial biopsy protocol achieved a pregnancy rate of 100%. By contrast, only 46% of patients with similar clinical characteristics (N = 24) achieved pregnancy without the hysteroscopic biopsy-induced endometrium injury (p Conclusions Our proof-of-concept study demonstrates that a site-specific hysteroscopic endometrium injury performed during the ongoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycle, instead of injuries received during prior cycles, significantly improves clinical outcomes in patients with repeated implantation failure.

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