Mandelin E, Koistinen H, Koistinen R, Arola J, Affandi B, Seppälä M
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
Fertil Steril. 2001 Sep;76(3):474-8. doi: 10.1016/s0015-0282(01)01969-0.
To determine whether subdermal levonorgestrel implants induce endometrial expression of glycodelin.
Cross-sectional, blinded study.
University clinic.
PATIENT(S): One hundred and eight women with subdermal implants and 19 postmenopausal women.
INTERVENTION(S): Endometrial biopsies, curettages, and hysterectomies.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Endometrial glycodelin expression was examined through immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and morphologic endometrial dating.
RESULT(S): Overall, 80% of the endometrial specimens obtained from women with subdermal levonorgestrel implants stained positive for glycodelin. Endometrial morphology of these women showed proliferative (71%), inactive/weakly proliferative (19%), menstrual or regenerating (6.5%), and other patterns (2.8%). Of these, 79%, 71%, 100%, and 100% were glycodelin positive, respectively. Nineteen specimens were obtained during the midcycle when glycodelin is not normally expressed: of these, 89% stained positive for glycodelin. Implant-related amenorrhea was associated with endometrial glycodelin expression in 58% of the women, whereas the endometrium specimens obtained from women with postmenopausal hypoestrogenic amenorrhea contained no detectable glycodelin.
CONCLUSION(S): Subdermal levonorgestrel implant use is often associated with endometrial expression of glycodelin. Because glycodelin has been shown to inhibit sperm-egg binding, the induction of glycodelin may contribute to the contraceptive activity of the implant.