a prospective study on reproductive outcome following oral antibiotic treatment for chronic endometritis in infertile women with a history of repeated implantation failure

Author(s):  
Kotaro Kitaya
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takuhiko Ichiyama ◽  
Keiji Kuroda ◽  
Yoko Nagai ◽  
Daichi Urushiyama ◽  
Motoharu Ono ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Repeated implantation failure (RIF) is estimated to occur in 15%–20% of infertile women undergoing in vitro fertilization-embryo transfer (IVF-ET). Molecular identification recently confirmed that the uterine microbiota may have implications for reproductive and obstetrical outcomes. One hundred forty-five women who had been diagnosed with RIF were enrolled in the study. Twenty-one healthy women were also enrolled as controls. We investigated their vaginal and endometrial microbiotas using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and compared the microbiota profiles in the patients with RIF and controls.Results: The endometrial microbiotas had higher α-diversities than did the vaginal microbiotas (p<0.001 in both patients with RIF and healthy women). The microbiota profiles showed that vaginal and endometrial samples in patients with RIF had significantly higher levels of 5 and 14 bacterial genera, respectively, than those in healthy women. These genera included Atopobium, Gardnerella, Prevotella and Megasphaera. Vaginal Lactobacillus rates in patients with RIF were significantly lower at 76.4 ± 38.9% compared with those of the controls at 91.8 ± 22.7% (p=0.018), but endometrial Lactobacillus rates did not significantly differ between the RIF patients and controls (56.2 ± 36.4% and 58.8 ± 37.0%, respectively, p=0.79) Conclusions: Impaired microbiota communities containing specific bacteria in both the endometrium and vagina were associated with implantation failure. The Lactobacillus rate in the vagina, but not the endometrium, may be a biomarker for RIF.Trial registration: UMIN Clinical Trials Registry, UMIN000031731, Registered 15 March 2018; https://upload.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr_e/ctr_view.cgi?recptno=R000036121


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kotaro Kitaya ◽  
Yoko Nagai ◽  
Wataru Arai ◽  
Yoshiyuki Sakuraba ◽  
Tomomoto Ishikawa

Studies suggest that persisting intrauterine bacterial infectious conditions such as chronic endometritis potentially impair the embryo implantation process. The microbial environment in the female reproductive tract, however, remains largely undetermined in infertile patients with a history of repeated implantation failure (RIF). Using next-generation sequencing, we aimed to characterize the microbiota in the endometrial fluid (EF) and vaginal secretions (VS) in women with RIF. Twenty-eight infertile women with a history of RIF and eighteen infertile women undergoing the first in vitro fertilization-embryo transfer attempt (the control group) were enrolled in the study. On days 6-8 in the luteal phase of the natural, oocyte-pickup, or hormone replacement cycle, the paired EF and VS samples were obtained separately. Extracted genomic DNA was pyrosequenced for the V4 region of 16S ribosomal RNA using a next-generation sequencer. The EF microbiota had higher α-diversity and broader bacterial species than the VS microbiota both in the RIF and control groups. The analysis of the UniFrac distance matrices between EF and VS also revealed significantly different clustering. Additionally, the EF microbiota, but not the VS microbiota, showed significant variation in community composition between the RIF group and the control group. Burkholderia species were not detected in the EF microbiota of any samples in the control group but were detectable in a quarter of the RIF group. To our best knowledge, this is the first study investigating the microbiota in the paired EF and VS samples in infertile women with RIF.


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