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HIV-positive patients undertaking ART have longer infertility histories than age-matched control subjects.

Auteurs : Santulli P, Gayet V, Fauque P, Chopin N, Dulioust E, Wolf JP, Chapron C, de Ziegler D

Date de publication : 02/2011

Résumé vulgarisé

OBJECTIVE: To review 5 years of assisted reproductive treatments (ART) provided to couples affected by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). DESIGN: Age-matched cohort study. SETTING: University-based tertiary center. PATIENT(S): Couples in whom the male (n = 87), female (n = 57), or both (n = 17) partners were HIV infected. The first ART cycle was compared with three sets of age-matched control subjects (3-to-1) which included 261, 171, and 51 couples, respectively. INTERVENTION(S): ART in HIV-infected couples and age-matched controls. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Infertility duration and ART outcome. RESULT(S): When initiating ART, all three HIV-infected groups had longer infertility histories, computed from when conception was attempted or infertility diagnosed, compared with noninfected age-matched control subjects. Outcome, however, was not different when only the male or female partner was infected, though with a trend toward higher cancellation and lower pregnancy rates. When both partners were HIV infected, cancellation were higher and pregnancy rates lower (12% versus 41.2%), than in age-matched control subjects. CONCLUSION(S): Our data showed longer infertility histories in all HIV-infected couples when undertaking their first ART. Outcome, however, was not altered when only one partner--male or female--was HIV infected. Efforts should therefore aim at assuring that HIV-infected couples access ART as promptly as their noninfected counterparts.