Objective: To investigate whether short-term postoperative estrogen-related therapy is associated with recurrence of intrauterine adhesions (IUA), endometrial polyps (EPs), and pregnancy outcomes in women with concomitant IUA and EPs. Methods: This single-center retrospective cohort study included women (18– 45 years) diagnosed with both IUA and EPs who underwent concurrent hysteroscopic transcervical resection of adhesions (TCRA) and polypectomy from January 2019 to June 2024. Patients were grouped by postoperative regimen: (1) estradiol–dydrogesterone sequential therapy (Femoston; estradiol 2 mg/dydrogesterone 10 mg; 2– 3 months), (2) combined oral contraceptive (Yaz; ethinylestradiol 0.02 mg/drospirenone 3 mg; 3 months), or (3) no hormonal therapy. Recurrence was confirmed by transvaginal ultrasound and/or hysteroscopy. Results: A total of 166 women were included (sequential therapy, n=47; COC, n=32; no hormone, n=87). Baseline polyp multiplicity differed among groups (P=0.003), with a higher proportion of multiple EPs in the COC group. Postoperative IUD/balloon placement also differed among groups (P=0.012). Overall recurrence rates were 6.6% for IUA and 4.8% for EPs. No statistically significant differences were observed among groups in postoperative menstrual changes, recurrence rates, time to recurrence, or pregnancy outcomes (all P> 0.05). Follow-up duration did not differ significantly among groups. Conclusion: In this retrospective cohort, no statistically significant differences were observed among short-term sequential estrogen–progestin therapy, COC use, and no hormonal therapy with respect to IUA recurrence, EP recurrence, or pregnancy outcomes. Short-term estradiol–dydrogesterone therapy was not associated with increased EP recurrence in women with IUA and a single EP. These findings are observational and should be confirmed in prospective studies. Keywords: intrauterine adhesions, endometrial polyps, estrogen, recurrence, pregnancy outcomes
Jiang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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