Language

English

Publication Date

1-1-2026

Journal

Human Reproduction Open

DOI

10.1093/hropen/hoag038

PMID

42239824

PMCID

PMC13226053

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

5-5-2026

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Study question: Does intercornual distance (ICD), as reflected by intrauterine stent size during hysteroscopic adhesiolysis, have an association with reproductive outcomes and provide information for postoperative risk stratification in women with moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions?

Summary answer: A smaller ICD was independently associated with a lower likelihood of clinical pregnancy within 1 year of the final hysteroscopy and may offer additional information for postoperative risk stratification in women with moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions.

What is known already: Reproductive outcomes following treatment for moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions vary considerably. Existing severity classifications offer limited discrimination within this group. The potential association between ICD and postoperative reproductive outcomes has not been systematically evaluated.

Study design size duration: Retrospective cohort study conducted at a tertiary academic center from November 2022 to October 2023. A total of 560 women were included, with up to 2 years of follow-up.

Participants/materials setting methods: Retrospective single-center cohort of women aged 18-44 years with moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions (American Fertility Society [AFS] score ≥ 5) undergoing standardized hysteroscopic management with adhesiolysis, intrauterine stent placement, and scheduled second-look hysteroscopy. ICD was reflected by intraoperatively selected stent size, categorized into ordered levels (XXXS-XXXL) and dichotomized using an XS threshold (∼20-22 mm). Postoperative ultrasound-derived ICD was analyzed for supportive evaluation. The primary outcome was clinical pregnancy within 1 year of the final hysteroscopy. Associations were examined using multivariable logistic regression with sensitivity analyses. The incremental predictive value and clinical utility of stent-size classification (≤XS vs >XS) beyond established clinical variables were evaluated using discrimination, calibration, and decision-curve analyses.

Main results and the role of chance: Women in the ≤XS group had lower odds of clinical pregnancy within 1 year of the final hysteroscopy compared with those in the >XS group (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 0.447, 95% CI 0.255-0.786; P = 0.005). The association was consistent in sensitivity analyses and when postoperative ultrasound-derived ICD was analyzed as a continuous variable. Although improvements in model discrimination were modest, the difference in the probability of clinical pregnancy between the ≤XS and >XS groups was 21.2% (absolute risk difference [ARD] = 21.2%, 95% CI 9.6-32.2; P < 0.001), corresponding to a number needed to benefit (NNB) of 4.7, indicating potential clinical utility for postoperative risk stratification.

Limitations reasons for caution: This single-center retrospective study may limit generalizability and is subject to selection bias and residual confounding. Prospective multicenter validation is required.

Wider implications of the findings: ICD may provide additional information for postoperative risk stratification in women with moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions.

Study funding/competing interests: This study was supported by Scientific and Technological Project of Furong Laboratory (Gynecological Disease and Reproductive Health) (No. 2023SK2109) and Key Research Project of National Key Clinical Specialties, Health Commission of Hunan Province (Z2023068), China. The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Keywords

intrauterine adhesions, intercornual distance, risk stratification, clinical pregnancy, hysteroscopy

Published Open-Access

yes

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