| Literature DB >> 29043757 |
Paz Leiva1, Juan Enrique Schwarze1,2, Pamela Vasquez3, Carolina Ortega2, Sonia Villa2, Javier Crosby4, José Balmaceda2, Ricardo Pommer2.
Abstract
Women submitted to ART treatments represent a select subgroup of individuals. Several studies have described the relationship between TAI and pregnancy outcomes as a result of ART, with contradictory results. The purpose of this systematic review was to determine the association between TAI and the risk of miscarriage in pregnancies resulting from ART. MEDLINE via PubMed, LILACS and Embase were searched for studies published in peer-reviewed journals from 1999 to 2017. The studies were summarized using the fixed effects model and the Peto's method to calculate RR in order to flesh out the association between TAI and spontaneous abortion. Only four papers were included in this systematic review and meta-analysis. Thirty-one miscarriages were observed in 210 clinical pregnancies of women with antithyroid antibodies; and 158 miscarriages were seen in 1,371 pregnancies without antithyroid antibodies. The meta-analysis failed to find an association between TAI and higher risk of reproductive loss, RR=0.94 95% confidence interval: 0.71-1.24; p=0.879. In conclusion, the presence of antithyroid antibodies was not associated with increased reproductive loss in patients submitted to ART treatments. It is our opinion that the presence of antithyroid antibodies should be considered as a secondary biomarker of autoimmune disease, rather than an actual cause of miscarriage in patients undergoing ART. Due to the small amount of evidence on the matter, the determination of TAI before the initiation of ART should be limited to research contexts.Entities:
Keywords: ART; anitbodies; thyroid
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29043757 PMCID: PMC5714606 DOI: 10.5935/1518-0557.20170057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JBRA Assist Reprod ISSN: 1517-5693
Figure 1Systematic review flowchart.
Figure 2Forest plot: RR of miscarriage in TAI (+) patients undergoing ART.
Summary of included studies.
| Methods | TAI (+) | TAI (-) | Conclusions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retrospective Cohort study of euthyroid
women, age 34-35 years, submitted to IVF/ICSI between April 2010 and
April 2012. | IVF patients undergoing ICSI with TPOAb+
vs TPOAb- did not present statistically significant differences in
fertilization, implantation, pregnancy, and live newborn
rates. | |||
| Retrospective cohort study of patients
(mean age=32 years) submitted to IVF/ICSI between August 2009 and
August 2010. | Fertilization implantation and pregnancy
rates after IVF-ET were significantly lower (64.3% vs. 74.6%,
| |||
| Retrospective Cohort study of euthyroid
women aged 20-35 years, carried out between January 2000 and January
2005. | In euthyroid patients, pregnancy and
delivery rates were not affected by the presence of TPOAb. | |||
| Retrospective cohort study of women aged
35±4 years offered IVF in 3 centers in the USA between April
1996 and April 1997. | The presence of TAI was similar between
patients offered ART and controls (16.4% vs. 14.5 %, OR:
1.16) |