Objective: To test the hypothesis that high numbers of uterine natural killer (uNK) cells in the endometrium of women with recurrent miscarriage (RM) could be reduced with prednisolone.
Design: A before and after study.
Setting: A tertiary referral teaching hospital.
Patient(s): Eighty-five women with idiopathic RM recruited from all over the UK and 18 women attending for sterilization (controls).
Intervention(s): An endometrial sample was taken on day 21 +/- 2 of the menstrual cycle. Immunohistochemistry was used to identify uNK (CD56+, CD16-, CD3-). Twenty-nine women with RM and >5% uNK agreed to take 20 mg oral prednisolone daily from day 1 to 21 of their menstrual cycle, when a second biopsy was obtained and analyzed.
Main outcome measure(s): The percentage of stromal cells that were uNK. The normal range was defined using control samples as <5%.
Result(s): Women with RM had significantly more uNK than the controls (P=.008). Prednisolone treatment significantly reduced the number of CD56 cells in the endometrium, from a median of 14% (before) to 9% (after) (P=.0004).
Conclusion(s): We have demonstrated that high numbers of uNK in preimplantation endometrium of women with recurrent miscarriage can be reduced with administration of prednisolone.