| Literature DB >> 33025403 |
Giovanni Buzzaccarini1, Amerigo Vitagliano2, Alessandra Andrisani2, Carla Mariaflavia Santarsiero3, Rossana Cicinelli3, Claudia Nardelli3, Guido Ambrosini2, Ettore Cicinelli3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Chronic endometritis (CE) is a frequent hysteroscopic and histological finding which affects embryo transfer implantation during IVF-ICSI cycles. In particular, CE impairs proper decidualization and, subsequently, implantation. Although this correlation has been clearly clarified, a pathophysiological explanation assembling all the studies performed has not been elucidated yet. For this reason, we have structured a systematic review considering all the original articles that evaluated a pathological element involved in CE and implantation impairment.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic endometritis; Embryo transfer; IVF; Infertility; Pathophysiology; Recurrent pregnancy failures; Recurrent pregnancy loss
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33025403 PMCID: PMC7714873 DOI: 10.1007/s10815-020-01955-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assist Reprod Genet ISSN: 1058-0468 Impact factor: 3.412
Main characteristics of the studies enrolled
| Authors and years (reference) | Study design, country, and time of realization | Participants and main inclusion criteria | Samples, timing, and methods | Main outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cicinelli, 2008 | Prospective controlled study, Italy, from January 2005 to April 2006 | 2190 women undergoing hysteroscopy for different indications. Vaginal and endometrial samples were collected from 438 women with a CE diagnosis at hysteroscopy and 100 women with no signs of CE (controls). | Diagnostic office hysteroscopy in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Women had a vaginal swab taken and an endometrial sampling using a 3-mm Novak’s curette connected to a 20-mL syringe. Cultures for common bacteria, | More than 70% of CE cases resulted from non-gonococcal and non-chlamydial infections. Common bacteria and Mycoplasma were the most frequent etiologic agents. Vaginal cultures have low concordance with endometrial cultures. |
| Mishra, 2008 | Retrospective case-control study, India, from January 2005 to June 2007 | 20 granulomatous endometritis, 10 chronic non-specific endometritis, and 30 controls | Endometrial curettings were obtained in the fourth week of the menstrual cycle. Immunohistochemistry for ER, PR, and Ki-67. | Higher ER, PR and Ki-67 expression in endometrial glandular and stromal cells. Endometrial inflammation interferes with local expression of ER, PR, and Ki-67. |
| Cicinelli, 2009 | Prospective controlled study, Italy, from January 2005 to April 2006 | 181 women in whom diagnostic hysteroscopy had showed the presence of CE. | Mini-hysteroscopy in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Vaginal and cervical swabs were obtained and endometrial sampling took place, using a 3-mm Novak curette connected to a 20-ml syringe. Histological examination, cultures for common bacteria, | Both vaginal and endocervical cultures have low concordance with endometrial cultures in women with diagnosed CE. |
| Matteo, 2009 | Case-control study, Italy, no dates reported | 23 infertile women. 9 with CE diagnosed and 14 without. | Diagnostic office mini-hysteroscopy and endometrial biopsy in the follicular phase of menstrual cycle. All patients, in the late secretory phase (LS) of the subsequent spontaneous menstrual cycle, underwent endometrial biopsies by a 3-mm Novak’s curette connected to a 20 mL syringe. Histological examination, flow cytometry, and antibody labeling. | The secretory endometrium of patients with CE displayed significantly lower percentage of CD56+ CD16- and of CD56bright CD16- cells as compared with group CE-, while the percentage of CD3+ cells was significantly higher. |
| Kitaya, 2010 | Case-control study, Japan, no dates reported | 76 infertile women with histological biopsy. 22 of them diagnosed with CE | Endometrial specimens were obtained from patients with unexplained infertility and who had undergone biopsy in search of endometrial pathology on days 6 to 8 after urinary luteinizing hormone-surge detection. Histological Examination and Immunoassay were performed. | B cell density is higher in CE endometrium. CXCL13 expression in CE microvascular endothelial cells is higher. |
| Carvalho, 2013 | Observational cohort study, Brazil, from 2009 to 2010 | 435 infertile women | Diagnostic hysteroscopy followed by blind endometrial aspiration biopsy using a silicone urethral catheter number 8. All the biopsies were performed after the 10th day of the menstrual cycle until the 5th postovulatory day. | Association between vascular changes, CE, and infertility. |
| Di Pietro, 2013 | Case-control study, Italy, no dates referred | 16 women with hysteroscopic and histological diagnosis of CE and 10 healthy women as controls. | Hysteroscopy and endometrial sampling using a Novak’s curette connected to a 20-mL syringe. The procedures were performed in the secretory phase during the implantation window. Histological examination and gene Expression Profiling by Real-Time RT-PCR. | IGFBP1, BCL2, and BAX are upregulated, while IL11, CCL4, IGF1, and CASP8 are downregulated. |
| Kitaya, 2014 | Case-control study, Japan, From January 2011 to December 2012 | 179 infertile women with repeated implantation failure (RIF). 59 were diagnosed with CE. | Fluid hysteroscopy was performed on days 6–12 of the menstrual cycle. Histological biopsy was performed using a 3-mm-wide curette. Histological Examination and Immunoassay were performed. | The density of IgM+, IgA1+, IgA2+, IgG1+, and IgG2+ stromal cells were significantly higher in the RIF-CE group than that in the RIF-non-CE and control group. |
| Pinto, 2015 | Case-control study, Italy, from March 2012 to December 2013 | 45 women referred for hysteroscopy with diagnosis of CE. 45 age-matched women as controls with no evidence of CE at hysteroscopy and biopsy. | Hysteroscopy, histology examination, and TVS evaluation of the EW pattern during the periovulatory (days 11–14) and midluteal (days 19–22) phases of the same cycle. | CE could influence uterine contractility. CE induces a reduction of retrograde motility in the periovulatory phase and an increase of anterograde and retrograde motility in the midluteal phase. |
| Kushnir, 2016 | Retrospective cohort study, USA, from January 2014 to August 2015 | 55 patients with recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) and/or implantation failure (RIF). | Hysteroscopic and histological examination. Serum examination. | No findings in the periphery serum that support the hypothesis that CE may, at least in some cases, have an autoimmune component. Dysregulation of local inflammatory pathways may play a role in the pathophysiology of RPL as well as RIF. |
| Wu, 2017 | Case-control study, Japan, no dates reported. | 17 patients, 9 CE (5 endometriosis), 8 non-CE (4endometriosis) | Hysteroscopy and curettage performed at 7 or 8 days after predicted ovulation. Endometrial Cultures, Immunoassay, Gene Expression Profiling by Real-Time RT-PCR, Immunohistochemistry | Increased cell numbers and reduced secretion of PRL and IGFBP-1. Increased expressions of ERα, ERβ, PRA, and PRB. |
| Moreno, 2018 | Case-control study, Italy, no dates reported | 113 women with CE diagnosed using endometrial histology, hysteroscopy, and/or microbial culture. | Hysteroscopy performed in the follicular phase (cycle day 7–12) and endometrial sampling using a 3-mm Novak curette connected to a 20-mL syringe. Microbiological culture and molecular microbiology diagnosis by RT-PCR. | RT-PCR effectively detects and quantifies bacterial DNA from chronic endometritis-causing pathogens in endometrial samples providing a feasible, faster, and cheaper method for the diagnosis of chronic endometritis. |
| Di Pietro, 2018 | Case-control study, Italy, from October 2016 to March 2017 | 15 women with hysteroscopic and histological diagnosis of CE and 15 healthy women. | Hysteroscopy was performed in follicular phase. Endometrial biopsies were taken with Pipelle de Cornier. Histological Examination and Serum Examination, Gene Expression Profiling by Real-Time RT-PCR. | Upregulation of miR-27a-3p and miR-124-3p in the endometrium and serum from women with CE and an anti-correlation relationship between miR-27a-3p and IGF1 in endometrium. |
| Liu, 2019 | Case-control observational study, China | 130 infertile women. 12 with CE diagnosed. | Endometrial fluid and scratch collection 7 days after LH surge. Endometrial scratch was performed with a Pipelle (Prodimed). Genomic DNA Extraction and PCR amplification using primers targeting the 16S rRNA gene. | Defining endometrial microbiota of women with or without CE. |
| Wang, 2019. | Case-control study, China, from February 2015 to July 2018 | 75 CE women with recurrent implantation failure and 75 women with male factor infertility. | Office hysteroscopy was scheduled during the follicular phase (between cycle day 8 to 12) of the menstrual cycle. All women with clinical CE by hysteroscope underwent endometrial biopsy using a curette for histological confirmation. Subsequently, gene expression profiling by real-time RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry, and immunoassay. | Decreased endometrial TGF-β and IL-10 expression and increased IL-17 expression. Increased autophagy (LC3-II) and mTORC1 downregulation. |
microorganism percentage detected at CE biopsies
| Authors and years | Analysis method | Microorganisms detected in CE endometrium |
|---|---|---|
| Cicinelli 2008 | Hysteroscopic and histologic exam, microorganism cultures. | Streptococci 27,9% Intestinal flora ( Staphylococci |
| Cicinelli 2009 | Microorganism cultures, PCR | Streptococci 28,7% Intestinal flora ( Staphylococci 4% |
| Moreno 2018 | PCR | Streptococci 47% Staphylococci 3% |
| Liu 2019 | PCR | (vs non-CE endometrium) Lactobacilli ↓ Others ↑ |
Fig. 1Chronic endometritis pathway