Only hydrosalpinges visible on ultrasound are associated with reduced implantation and pregnancy rates after in-vitro fertilization

Abstract
A retrospective analysis of clinical and laboratory data was made of all in-vitro fertilization (IVF) patients with tubal pathology who had their first ever embryo transfer cycle between January 1st, 1992 and September 1st, 1996. The aim of the study was to determine the effect of the presence of a hydrosalpinx, whether or not visible by ultrasound, on pregnancy, multiple pregnancy and implantation rates in our patient population. The IVF success rate was also analysed by calculating cumulative ongoing pregnancy rates of the same patient group using the lifetime table approach. In the presence of an ultrasound-visible hydrosalpinx, rates of pregnancy and multiple pregnancy appeared reduced, but the differences were not significant. The rates of implantation, clinical implantation and ongoing implantation were significantly lower in the presence of an ultrasound-visible hydrosalpinx (odds ratios 0.33-0.46, C.I. 0.21-0.96). The cumulative chance of achieving an ongoing pregnancy after one or more IVF cycles was significantly reduced in the presence of an ultrasound-visible hydrosalpinx (relative hazard 0.36, C.I. 0.22-0.59). In the presence of a hydrosalpinx not visible by ultrasound the IVF outcome was not reduced. This retrospective study confirms that patients with hydrosalpinges have an impaired IVF outcome. Unique to this study and previously unobserved is the finding that there is a subgroup of patients with hydrosalpinges, those with ultrasound-visible hydrosalpinges, which is exclusively responsible for this impaired outcome.