Abstract

The purpose of the study was to determine the cut-off values for peripheral and uterine natural killer (pNK, uNK) cells in fertile controls and in women with recurrent implantation failure (RIF). In this study, 50 women with RIF and 50 fertile controls were enrolled. Midluteal endometrial biopsy samples from both cases and controls were obtained for CD 56+ cell immunohistochemistry labeling to identify uNK cells. Peripheral venous blood was also taken during the biopsy to detect pNK cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells using flow cytometry. Cut-off values were obtained from fertile controls. Using a non-parametric Mann-Whitney U-test, the medians of the data sets were compared. The median values for uNK and pNK cell levels in the control group were 7% and 11.6%, respectively. The median value for uNK cells in RIF patients was 9%, which was higher than the one in controls but not statistically significant (p-value of 0.689). The median pNK levels (11.6% vs. 12.4%) were comparable between the RIF group and the controls. Moreover, it was found that 68% of individuals had uNK cell counts below the reference value, while 32% had excessive levels exceeding 7%. Additionally, only 51.4% of the RIF group had increased pNK cells. The pNK cell cut-off values need to be used with caution because there was no difference between fertile controls and RIF women. If immunotherapy is recommended for RIF women, uNK cell testing should be used as the preferred approach.

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