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Infertility

Infertility. UNC School of Medicine Obstetrics and Gynecology Clerkship Case Based Seminar Series. Objectives for Infertility. Define infertility Describe the causes of male and female infertility Describe the evaluation and initial management of an infertile couple

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Infertility

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  1. Infertility UNC School of Medicine Obstetrics and Gynecology Clerkship Case Based Seminar Series

  2. Objectives for Infertility • Define infertility • Describe the causes of male and female infertility • Describe the evaluation and initial management of an infertile couple • List the psychosocial issues associated with infertility

  3. Definition • Failure of a couple to conceive after 1 year of regular intercourse without use of contraception • Primary infertility – No prior pregnancies • Secondary infertility – Prior pregnancy

  4. Prevalence • Infertility affects 10-15% of reproductive-age couples in the U.S. • Approx. 85% of couples achieve pregnancy within 1 year • Conception rate (fecundability) • 25% conceive within 1 mo. • 60% conceive within 6 mo.’s • 75% conceive within 9 mo.’s • 90% conceive within 18 mo.’s

  5. Etiology Successful conception requires a specific series of events: • Ovulation of competent oocyte • Production of competent sperm • Juxtaposition of sperm and oocyte in a patent reproductive tract • Fertilization • Generation of a viable embryo • Transport of the embryo to the uterine cavity • Implantation of the embryo into the endometrium

  6. Etiology • Major causes of of infertility: • Female factor – 60% • Ovulatory dysfunction • Abnormalities of female reproductive tract • Peritoneal factors • Reproductive aging • Male factor – 20% • Abnormal semen quality • Abnormalities of male reproductive tract • Idiopathic – 15% Infertility in ~ 20-40% of couples has multiple causes

  7. Infertility: History • Female • Duration of infertility and prior evaluation or therapy • Menstrual cycle (length and characteristics) • Symptoms associated with ovulation (e.g. breast tenderness, bloating, mood changes) • Full OBHx and GynHx • Prior pregnancies, surgeries, or STD’s • Sexual history (frequency of intercourse) • Chronic medical illness • Family history (infertility, birth defects, genetic disorders) • Social history (smoking, EtOH, drugs)

  8. Infertility: History • Male • Prior children • Genital tract infections • Genital surgery or trauma • Chronic medical illness • Medications (e.g. Furantoins, CCB) • EtOH, drugs, or smoking • Sexual history (frequency of intercourse)

  9. Infertility: Physical Exam • Female • Height, weight , BMI • Pelvic exam • Masses • Tenderness (Adnexa, Cul-de-sac) • Structural abnormalities (Vagina, Cervix, or Uterus) • Male (Urologist referral) • Evidence of androgen deficiency • Structural defects (e.g. varicocele, hernia)

  10. Male factor: Evaluation

  11. Male factor: Evaluation • Semen analysis • Following 2-4 day period of abstinence • Repeated x1 for accuracy

  12. Male factor: Evaluation • Urologic evaluation • Physical Exam • Varicocele • Congenital absence of vas deferens (CAVD) • Transrectal ultrasound • Vasography, Seminal vesiculography • Epididymal sperm aspiration (PESA or MESA)

  13. Male factor: Evaluation • Endocrine evaluation • Indication: Oligospermia (< 10million/mL) or sexual dysfunction (decreased libido, impotence) • FSH, LH, testosterone • Genetic evaluation • Indication: Azoospermia (no sperm) • CFTR mutation • Karyotype (Klinefelter’s, Y chromosome deletion) • Testicular biopsy • Indication: Nonobstructiveazoospermia • Palpable vasa • Normal testis volume • Normal FSH/LH

  14. Female factor: Evaluation

  15. Female factor: Menstrual Cycle

  16. Female factor: Evaluation • Ovulation • Initial evaluation: • Basal body temp – rise for > 10 days indicates ovulation • Ovulation predictor kit – detects LH surge in urine • Further evaluation: • Mid-luteal phase progesterone level - level > 3 ng/mL provides qualitative evidence of recent ovulation • Endocrine testing (TSH, prolactin, FSH, LH, Estradiol, DHEA-S) • Endometrial biopsy • Not routinely performed

  17. Female factor: Evaluation • Reproductive tract • Initial evaluation: • Hysterosalpingogram (HSG) • Detect uterine anomalies (septate or bicornuate uterus, uterine adhesions, uterine leiomyoma) • Detect patency of fallopian tubes (occlusion, hydrosalpinx, salpingitis) • Ultrasound – alternative to HSG to evaluate uterus

  18. Female factor: Evaluation • Reproductive tract • Further evaluation: • Saline-infusion sonography (SIS) • Hysteroscopy • Laparoscopic chromotubation

  19. Female factor: Evaluation • Peritoneal factors • Laparoscopy • Endometriosis • Pelvic/adnexal adhesions

  20. Female factor: Evaluation • Reproductive aging • Indications: • > 35 years of age • 1st degree relative with early menopause • Previous ovarian insult (surgery, chemotherapy, radiation) • Smoking • Poor response to ovarian stimulation • Unexplained infertility • Candidate for IVF

  21. Female factor: Evaluation • Reproductive aging • Cycle day 3 serum FSH and estradiol • Abnormal (“diminished ovarian reserve”) • FSH > 10 IU/L • Estradiol > 75-80 pg/mL • Clomiphene citrate challenge test • Cycle day 10 serum FSH • Serum antimullerian hormone (AMH)

  22. Idiopathic Infertility • Prevalence ~ 15% • Factors that cannot be identified • Sperm transport defects • Inability of sperm to fertilize egg • Implantation defects

  23. Infertility: Management • Male Factor • Avoidance of alcohol • Scheduled intercourse • Ligation of venous plexus for significant varicocele • Intrauterine insemination (IUI) with washed sperm • Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) + IVF • Donor sperm insemination

  24. Infertility: Management • Anovulation • Oral medications: • Clomiphene citrate • Dopamine agonists (Bromocriptine) - hyperprolactinemia • Injectable medications: • Gonadotropins (FSH/hMG, hCG) • Laparoscopic “ovarian drilling” • Complications: Ovarian hyperstimulation, Multiple pregnancy

  25. Infertility: Management • Reproductive tract abnormality • Uterine: Myomectomy, Septoplasty, Adhesiolysis • Tubal: Microsurgical tuboplasty, Neosalpigostomy • Peritoneal: Laparascopic treatment of endometriosis, Adhesiolysis • Idiopathic infertility • Ovarian stimulation + IUI • Clomiphene or gonadotropins (hMG, hCG) • IVF

  26. Infertility: Management (IVF) • Used for: • Severe male factor • Tubal disease • Couples who failed other treatments • Requires • Controlled ovarian hyperstimulation • Retrieval of oocytes • In vitro fertilization and embryo transfer • Procedures • IVF + embryo transfer (IVF-ET) • Intracytoplasmic sperm injection + embryo transfer (ICSI-ET) • Donor egg IVF + embryo transfer

  27. Psychological • The psychological stress associated with infertility must be recognized and patients should be counseled appropriately.

  28. Bottom Line Concepts • Infertility is defined as one year of unprotected coitus without conception. Infertility may be primary or secondary. • Multiple causes must be considered for infertility diagnosis and treatment. • Male and female reproductive tract anatomy and physiology should be reviewed in order to generate a full differential diagnosis. • Components of an initial infertility workup include a thorough history and physical examination. Laboratory investigations include a semen analysis, documentation of ovulation, and hysterosalpingogram. • Dysfunction of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis and medical illness, including thyroid disease and pituitary tumors, can cause ovulatory disturbances. • Success rates with IVF depend on the etiology of infertility and the age of the female partner.

  29. References and Resources • APGO Medical Student Educational Objectives, 9th edition, (2009), Educational Topic 48 (p102-103). • Beckman & Ling: Obstetrics and Gynecology, 6th edition, (2010), Charles RB Beckmann, Frank W Ling, Barabara M Barzansky, William NP Herbert, Douglas W Laube, Roger P Smith. Chapter 38 (p337-346). • Hacker & Moore: Hacker and Moore's Essentials of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 5th edition (2009), Neville F Hacker, Joseph C Gambone, Calvin J Hobel. Chapter 34 (p371-378).

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