Objective: To investigate whether operative hysteroscopy in addition to vacuum aspiration for the management of early pregnancy loss effectively increases the success rate of subsequent frozen embryo transfer.
Design: Propensity score-matched cohort study.
Setting: Academic hospital.
Patient(s): Women with a miscarriage at 5-16 gestational weeks during an in vitro fertilization cycle in Peking University Third Hospital from 2015 to 2022.
Intervention(s): Hysteroscopy plus vacuum aspiration vs. conventional vacuum aspiration.
Main outcome measure(s): Live birth rate in the subsequent frozen embryo transfer.
Result(s): A total of 347 women who underwent vacuum aspiration plus hysteroscopy and 2,562 women who underwent conventional vacuum aspiration were included in the analysis. After propensity score matching (1:1 ratio), 325 women were included in each group. Compared with women who underwent vacuum aspiration, those who underwent vacuum aspiration plus hysteroscopy were associated with a lower rate of live birth in the propensity score-based matched cohort (22% vs. 30%; adjusted odds ratio, 0.68 [0.47-0.97]). Biochemical, clinical, and multiple pregnancy rates were not significantly different, as was the miscarriage rate. In the overall cohort, 11 women experienced surgery reintervention in the vacuum aspiration group (0.4%), whereas none required surgery reintervention in the vacuum aspiration plus hysteroscopy group.
Conclusion(s): Women who underwent vacuum aspiration plus hysteroscopy may be associated with lower rates of live birth than those who underwent vacuum aspiration. Further studies are necessary to establish this relationship definitively.
Keywords: Operative hysteroscopy; frozen embryo transfer; miscarriage; propensity score–matched study; vacuum aspiration.
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