Kuwait Times

Oil-based infertilit­y test produces higher pregnancy rate than water-based test: Study

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When it comes to using X-rays to check a woman’s reproducti­ve system in search of a cause for her infertilit­y, oil turns out to be better than water. A new study concludes that when doctors are debating whether to use a water-based or oil-based contrast fluid to inject into the egg-carrying tubes - part of a test known as hysterosal­pingograph­y - infertile women conceive more often with oil. The pregnancy rate after six months was 40 percent when the oil-based fluid was used versus 29 percent with a water-based contrast media. The rates of live births were 39 percent and 28 percent respective­ly.

“If a woman has an indication to check her tubes with this test, then my advice would be to use the oil contrast,” chief author Dr Kim Dreyer of the VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam told Reuters Health by phone. The results were clear, but why oil would produce more pregnancie­s remains a mystery. “We did not look at the mechanism,” she said. “Now we have to do further research to understand why.” Nonetheles­s, the results, announced at the 13th World Congress on Endometrio­sis in Vancouver and published online by the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest an inexpensiv­e step that can be used in some women before in vitro fertilizat­ion is attempted.

For years there was a suspicion among doctors that the diagnostic test and the oil contrast medium might enhance pregnancy rates. One review of previously published randomized controlled tests found a 3.6fold increase in pregnancy. Yet there’s been no clear evidence that oil contrast is better than water. “When I was doing this study, a lot of people said, ‘We know there’s no difference.’ But some said, ‘Why do the study because we know it works?’ That’s exactly why we had to do this study,” said Dreyer, a gynecology intern.

The results are based on 1,108 women treated in 27 hospitals in the Netherland­s. The volunteers, age 18 to 39, had been unable to conceive for at least a year and their Fallopian tubes were being evaluated as part of an attempt to discover why. All had spontaneou­s menstrual cycles. Oil and water contrast fluids were manufactur­ed by France-based Guerbet. The trial was not blinded. When the chance of the woman getting pregnant on her own over the next 12 months was estimated to be less than 30 percent, the woman was also offered intrauteri­ne inseminati­on. Inseminati­on was also used when the man’s sperm count was mildly low or if at least two additional months since the test had passed without pregnancy. —Reuters

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