Bosteels Jan, Weyers Steven, Kasius Jenneke, Broekmans Frank J, Mol Ben Willem J, D'Hooghe Thomas M
Belgian Branch of the Dutch Cochrane Centre, Kapucijnenvoer 33 blok J bus 7001, 3000 Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Nov 9(11):CD011110. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011110.pub2.
Limited observational evidence suggests potential benefit for subfertile women undergoing operative hysteroscopy with several anti-adhesion therapies (e.g. insertion of an intrauterine device (IUD) or balloon, hormonal treatment, barrier gels or human amniotic membrane grafting) to decrease intrauterine adhesions (IUAs).
To assess the effectiveness of anti-adhesion therapies versus placebo, no treatment or any other anti-adhesion therapy following operative hysteroscopy for treatment of female subfertility.
We searched the following databases from inception to March 2015: the Cochrane Menstrual Disorders and Subfertility Specialised Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (2015, Issue 2), MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) and other electronic sources of trials, including trial registers, sources of unpublished literature and reference lists. We handsearched The Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology, and we contacted experts in the field.
Randomised comparisons of anti-adhesion therapies versus placebo, no treatment or any other anti-adhesion therapy following operative hysteroscopy in subfertile women. The primary outcome was live birth or ongoing pregnancy. Secondary outcomes were clinical pregnancy, miscarriage and IUAs present at second look, along with their mean adhesion scores or severity.
Two review authors independently selected studies, assessed risk of bias, extracted data and evaluated quality of the evidence using the GRADE (Grades of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation) method.
We included 11 randomised studies on use of an inserted device versus no treatment (two studies; 84 women) or another inserted device (one study; 162 women), hormonal treatment versus no treatment or placebo (two studies; 131 women), gel versus no treatment (five studies; 383 women) and graft versus no graft (one study; 43 women). The total number of women randomly assigned was 924, but data on only 803 participants were available for analysis. The proportion of subfertile women varied from 0% (one study; 41 women), to less than 50% (six studies; 487 women), to 100% (one study; 43 women); the proportion was unknown in three studies (232 women). Most studies (9/11) were at high risk of bias with respect to one or more methodological criteria.We found no evidence of differences between anti-adhesion therapy and no treatment or placebo with respect to live birth rates (odds ratio (OR) 0.99, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.46 to 2.13, P value = 0.98, three studies, 150 women; low-quality evidence) and no statistical heterogeneity (Chi(2) = 0.14, df = 2 (P value = 0.93), I(2) = 0%).Anti-adhesion therapy was associated with fewer IUAs at any second-look hysteroscopy when compared with no treatment or placebo (OR 0.36, 95% CI 0.20 to 0.64, P value = 0.0005, seven studies, 528 women; very low-quality evidence). We found no statistical heterogeneity (Chi(2) = 2.65, df = 5 (P value = 0.75), I(2) = 0%). The number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) was 9 (95% CI 6 to 20).No evidence suggested differences between an IUD and an intrauterine balloon with respect to IUAs at second-look hysteroscopy (OR 1.23, 95% CI 0.64 to 2.37, P value = 0.54, one study, 162 women; very low-quality evidence).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Implications for clinical practiceThe quality of the evidence retrieved was low or very low for all outcomes. Clinical effectiveness of anti-adhesion treatment for improving key reproductive outcomes or for decreasing IUAs following operative hysteroscopy in subfertile women remains uncertain. Implications for researchAdditional studies are needed to assess the effectiveness of different anti-adhesion therapies for improving reproductive outcomes in subfertile women treated by operative hysteroscopy.
有限的观察性证据表明,对于接受手术宫腔镜检查的不孕女性,采用几种抗粘连疗法(如放置宫内节育器(IUD)或球囊、激素治疗、屏障凝胶或人羊膜移植)可能有助于减少宫腔粘连(IUA)。
评估抗粘连疗法与安慰剂、不治疗或手术宫腔镜检查后任何其他抗粘连疗法相比,治疗女性不孕症的有效性。
我们检索了以下数据库,从建库至2015年3月:Cochrane月经紊乱与不孕症专业注册库、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(2015年第2期)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)以及其他试验电子来源,包括试验注册库、未发表文献来源和参考文献列表。我们手工检索了《微创妇科学杂志》,并联系了该领域的专家。
对不孕女性手术宫腔镜检查后抗粘连疗法与安慰剂、不治疗或任何其他抗粘连疗法进行随机对照比较。主要结局是活产或持续妊娠。次要结局是临床妊娠、流产以及二次宫腔镜检查时存在的IUA,以及它们的平均粘连评分或严重程度。
两位综述作者独立选择研究、评估偏倚风险、提取数据并使用GRADE(推荐分级、评估、制定与评价)方法评估证据质量。
我们纳入了11项随机研究,比较了置入装置与不治疗(两项研究;84名女性)或另一种置入装置(一项研究;162名女性)、激素治疗与不治疗或安慰剂(两项研究;131名女性)、凝胶与不治疗(五项研究;383名女性)以及移植与不移植(一项研究;43名女性)。随机分配的女性总数为924名,但仅有803名参与者的数据可供分析。不孕女性的比例从0%(一项研究;41名女性)到不到50%(六项研究;487名女性)再到100%(一项研究;43名女性)不等;三项研究(232名女性)中该比例未知多数研究(9/11)在一个或多个方法学标准方面存在高偏倚风险。我们发现抗粘连疗法与不治疗或安慰剂在活产率方面无差异的证据(比值比(OR)0.99,95%置信区间(CI)0.46至2.13,P值 = 0.98,三项研究,150名女性;低质量证据)且无统计学异质性(Chi(2)=0.14,自由度 = 2(P值 = 0.93),I(2)=0%)。与不治疗或安慰剂相比,抗粘连疗法在任何二次宫腔镜检查时与较少的IUA相关(OR 0.36,95% CI 0.20至0.64,P值 = 0.0005,七项研究,528名女性;极低质量证据)。我们未发现统计学异质性(Chi(2)=2.65,自由度 = 5(P值 = 0.75),I(2)=0%)。为获得额外有益结局所需治疗人数(NNTB)为9(95% CI 6至20)。没有证据表明在二次宫腔镜检查时IUD与宫内球囊在IUA方面存在差异(OR 1.23,95% CI 0.64至2.37,P值 = 0.54,一项研究,162名女性;极低质量证据)。
对临床实践的启示所有结局检索到的证据质量低或极低。抗粘连治疗对改善不孕女性手术宫腔镜检查后的关键生殖结局或减少IUA的临床有效性仍不确定。对研究的启示需要进一步研究以评估不同抗粘连疗法对改善接受手术宫腔镜检查的不孕女性生殖结局的有效性。