Abstract

To evaluate reproductive outcomes after hysteroscopic adhesiolysis for patients with Asherman syndrome (AS) who presented with infertility and/or subfertility. A retrospective study was conducted in the Women's Specialized Hospital, King Fahad Medical City, from December 2010 to December 2018. The medical records were reviewed for all infertile women who had hysteroscopic adhesiolysis. The specific study's main reproductive outcomes included: [1] the overall rate of conception, [2] the overall rate of conception according to the severity degree of intrauterine adhesions (IUAs), [3] the reproductive methods for achieving conception, and [4] pregnancy outcomes. Reproductive methods for conception included spontaneous conception, ovulation induction (OI), intrauterine insemination (IUI), and in-vitro fertilization (IVF) with/without intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Outcomes of pregnancy included ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage, and live birth events. Forty-one patients (n=41) were analyzed. Their mean age was 32.2±4.6 years. The most common menstrual pattern amongst these patients was hypomenorrhea 46.4%. All patients resumed regular menstrual cycles after the adhesiolysis procedure. The overall conception rate during the 24 months follow up was 53.6%, and the overall live birth rate was 34.2%. Of the 22 patients who conceived, 12 patients (29.2%) conceived spontaneously, 2 (4.9%) with IUI, and 8 (19.5%) with IVF-ICSI. The patients with minimal IUAs had a significantly higher pregnancy rate (71.4%) when compared to those with moderate (47%) and severe (40%) IUA (two-tailed log-rank test, p=0.041). The spontaneous cumulative conception rate following hysteroscopic adhesiolysis was higher in patients with minimal IUAs than those with moderate and severe IUAs.

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