Endometrial scratching in women with one failed IVF/ICSI cycle-outcomes of a randomised controlled trial (SCRaTCH)

STUDY QUESTION: Does endometrial scratching in women with one failed IVF/ICSI treatment affect the chance of a live birth of the subsequent fresh IVF/ICSI cycle? SUMMARY ANSWER: In this study, 4.6% more live births were observed in the scratch group, with a likely certainty range between -0.7% and +9.9%. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Since the first suggestion that endometrial scratching might improve embryo implantation during IVF/ICSI, many clinical trials have been conducted. However, due to limitations in sample size and study quality, it remains unclear whether endometrial scratching improves IV... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van Hoogenhuijze, N E
Mol, F
Laven, J S E
Groenewoud, E R
Traas, M A F
Janssen, C A H
Teklenburg, G
de Bruin, J P
van Oppenraaij, R H F
Maas, J W M
Moll, E
Fleischer, K
van Hooff, M H A
de Koning, C H
Cantineau, A E P
Lambalk, C B
Verberg, M
van Heusden, A M
Manger, A P
van Rumste, M M E
van der Voet, L F
Pieterse, Q D
Visser, J
Brinkhuis, E A
den Hartog, J E
Glas, M W
Klijn, N F
van der Meer, S
Bandell, M L
Boxmeer, J C
van Disseldorp, J
Smeenk, J
van Wely, M
Eijkemans, M J C
Torrance, H L
Broekmans, F J M
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Reihe/Periodikum: van Hoogenhuijze , N E , Mol , F , Laven , J S E , Groenewoud , E R , Traas , M A F , Janssen , C A H , Teklenburg , G , de Bruin , J P , van Oppenraaij , R H F , Maas , J W M , Moll , E , Fleischer , K , van Hooff , M H A , de Koning , C H , Cantineau , A E P , Lambalk , C B , Verberg , M , van Heusden , A M , Manger , A P , van Rumste , M M E , van der Voet , L F , Pieterse , Q D , Visser , J , Brinkhuis , E A , den Hartog , J E , Glas , M W , Klijn , N F , van der Meer , S , Bandell , M L , Boxmeer , J C , van Disseldorp , J , Smeenk , J , van Wely , M , Eijkemans , M J C , Torrance , H L & Broekmans , F J M 2021 , ' Endometrial scratching in women with one failed IVF/ICSI cycle-outcomes of a randomised controlled trial (SCRaTCH) ' , Human Reproduction , vol. 36 , no. 1 , pp. 87-98 . https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deaa268
Schlagwörter: Belgium / Birth Rate / Female / Fertilization in Vitro / Humans / Live Birth / Netherlands / Pregnancy / Pregnancy Rate / Sperm Injections / Intracytoplasmic / cumulative live birth / endometrial biopsy catheter / ICSI / IN-VITRO FERTILIZATION / LOCAL INJURY / endometrium / endometrial injury / RECURRENT IMPLANTATION FAILURE / embryo implantation / IVF / endometrial scratch / SPERM INJECTION
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27206404
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/publications/8bb5c511-c3a8-4e80-a86d-d20b8a9c5d1f

STUDY QUESTION: Does endometrial scratching in women with one failed IVF/ICSI treatment affect the chance of a live birth of the subsequent fresh IVF/ICSI cycle? SUMMARY ANSWER: In this study, 4.6% more live births were observed in the scratch group, with a likely certainty range between -0.7% and +9.9%. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Since the first suggestion that endometrial scratching might improve embryo implantation during IVF/ICSI, many clinical trials have been conducted. However, due to limitations in sample size and study quality, it remains unclear whether endometrial scratching improves IVF/ICSI outcomes. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: The SCRaTCH trial was a non-blinded randomised controlled trial in women with one unsuccessful IVF/ICSI cycle and assessed whether a single endometrial scratch using an endometrial biopsy catheter would lead to a higher live birth rate after the subsequent IVF/ICSI treatment compared to no scratch. The study took place in 8 academic and 24 general hospitals. Participants were randomised between January 2016 and July 2018 by a web-based randomisation programme. Secondary outcomes included cumulative 12-month ongoing pregnancy leading to live birth rate. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Women with one previous failed IVF/ICSI treatment and planning a second fresh IVF/ICSI treatment were eligible. In total, 933 participants out of 1065 eligibles were included (participation rate 88%). MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: After the fresh transfer, 4.6% more live births were observed in the scratch compared to control group (110/465 versus 88/461, respectively, risk ratio (RR) 1.24 [95% CI 0.96-1.59]). These data are consistent with a true difference of between -0.7% and +9.9% (95% CI), indicating that while the largest proportion of the 95% CI is positive, scratching could have no or even a small negative effect. Biochemical pregnancy loss and miscarriage rate did not differ between the two groups: in the scratch group 27/153 biochemical pregnancy losses and 14/126 ...