It is the goal of our staff to provide you with the latest women's healthcare innovations to address infertility and coexisting gynecologic problems. Backed by a superb laboratory team, CRH has enabled thousands of couples to conceive.  Contact us to schedule an appointment or have additional questions about infertility treatment at CRH.

 

 

Other Tubal Occlusion Treatments

Porximal tubal blockage can be treated hysteroscopically, radiographically, or by microsurgical reanastomosis.  A meta-analysis documented an intrauterine pregnancy rate of 50% in women undergoing surgery for proximal tubal blockages, with the highest success rates achieved with selective salpingography and transcervical cannulation.  Laparoscopic removal of thin, avascular adhesions involving the tube and ovaries offers a reasonable chance for pregnancy, with a success rate up to 70% but with an ectopic pregnancy rate of 20%.

Women with significant symptoms, such as pelvic pain, secondary to adhesions or endometriosis, also benefit from laparoscopic surgery.  Removal of severe tubal adhesions and treatment of hydrosalpinges by neosalpingostomy offers a less predictable pregnancy rate.  Repair of bilateral tubal damage - proximal and distal tubal adhesions - has the lowest chance of an intrauterine pregnancy and is not recommended.  Studies suggest that in some cases, there is an increased pregnancy rate if large hydrosalpinges are removed or drained laparoscopically prior to IVF when IVF is recommended due to other infertility factors.  Thus, tubal surgery prior to IVF increases the chance for successful infertility treatment.

Laparoscopic surgery may not be the treatment of choice in cases of severe tubal factor infertility.  IVF is often a superior treatment for these patients, offering a reasonable chance for pregnancy, lowering the risk of ectopic pregnancy, and avoiding the prolonged delay required to determine the success of treatment.

Fallopian Tube Recanalization

Obstruction of the fallopian tube close to its insertion into the uterus, which is conventionally termed "proximal," is the most treatable because if often occurs because of the accumulation of mucus or debris, which forms an impacted plug in the interstitial or proximal isthmic portion of the tube. Fallopian tube catheterization has developed as an extension of hysterosalpingography. Tubal cannulation results in improved visualization of the fallopian tube anatomy. It is also a treatment for infertility caused by proximal tubal obstruction (10 to 20 percent of patients with tubal disease).

Tubal cannulation has almost eliminated the real and false diagnosis of unilateral tubal occlusion, identified patients with proximal and distal occlusion ("bipolar tubal occlusion"), and eliminated or postponed the need for a costly hysteroscopy or laparoscopy. Distal obstruction in the tube is caused by fibrosis and peritubal disease, which are not amenable to catheter recanalization techniques.

The procedure should not be performed if catheterization is unlikely to be successful, such as patients with Mullerian anomaly, cornual fibroids, or severe salpingitis isthmica nodosa (SIN).  Both wire recanalization and balloon tuboplasty yield 80 to 90 percent tubal patency, and 40 to 50 percent six-month pregnancy rates in selected patients. In summary, the ® tubal cannulation and easy to perform coaxial system allows versatile diagnosis and treatment of cornual tubal occlusion, as well as isthmic tubal obstruction.

Occlusion that develops more distally in the isthmus, or in the ampullary or fimbriated portions of the tube is commonly due to previous pelvic infection or endometriosis. It is more difficult to recanalize and patients are less likely to have a successful intrauterine pregnancy. To estimate the potential impact of fallopian tube recanalization (FTR) depends on the percentage of cases in which the occlusion is proximal. Early figures ranged between 20 and 25% (4,5), meaning that the number of potentially treatable patients in the U.S. may be as high as 230,000. However, since the overall incidence of tubal disease in the two populations is similar (219 patients or 44%), the implication is that the number of treatable patients in the U.S. may be only 140,000 or less.

There is no agreement between gynecologists and radiologists regarding the proper sequence for diagnosing and treating obstructed fallopian tubes, nor is there a consensus within either of those two disciplines. There are also no established reporting standards, so it is difficult to make accurate comparisons between techniques, success rates, and treatment strategies. Pregnancy rates vary widely among authors, not so much because of differences in technique, but because of how the results are reported.

Most radiologists and gynecologists who use fluoroscopic guidance have adopted some version of the technique developed by Rösch and Thurmond. A number of gynecologists, on the other hand, prefer ultrasound-guidance or hysteroscopy for cannulation of the tubes, often in conjunction with laparoscopy. Even the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (formerly the American Fertility Society) recommends selective salpingography as the next diagnostic step when non-filling of one or both tubes is encountered at HSG.

Hysterosalpingography has been the traditional method for evaluating the tubes, but it has limitations, even for confirming tubal patency. For the most part, our understanding of tubal pathophysiology is rudimentary at best. The non-filling tube may be patent, but continued injection of contrast cannot overcome the resistance in the tube and spillage from the open side often crosses over and obscures the non-filling side.

When selective salpingography fails to show the proximal tube, then efforts should be made to place a catheter and/or guide wire into the tube to clear the obstruction. However, in contrast to Gleicher et al., the patients treated by Millward et al. had an intrauterine pregnancy rate of 23%. Of the 30 patients recanalized by tubal catheterization, 17 became pregnant (26% overall), and only one patient where the guide wire was used became pregnant (2% overall), which was an ectopic pregnancy. Unlike these analyses of specific recanalization techniques, most authors group their patients together in the results, regardless of treatment type.

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