A retrospective cohort study of tuberculosis disease between in vitro fertilisation-embryo transfer and natural pregnancy in Shenzhen China.
Sinian Li, Jin Wang, Xiaomin Wang, Youfeng Su, Wenying Gao, Hancheng Liang, Hua Huang, Jian Zeng, et al. (10 authors)
International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases · 2026-05
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to compare the clinical profiles and maternal-foetal outcomes of tuberculosis (TB) disease in pregnant women following in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVF-ET) versus natural conception (NC), and identify the associated high-risk factors.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis included 133 pregnant women with TB disease, stratified into IVF-ET (n = 16) and NC (n = 117) groups. Clinical, radiological, and laboratory parameters were evaluated, and logistic regression identified risk factors for stillbirth or preterm birth.
RESULTS: The IVF-ET group exhibited significantly more severe TB manifestations, including higher rates of bilateral pulmonary lesions (100.0% vs 39.3%), miliary TB (93.8% vs 5.1%), and TB meningitis (37.5% vs 3.4%), alongside prolonged hospitalization (median 18.0 vs 9.0 days, P < 0.001). These patients also demonstrated lower lymphocyte, CD4, and CD3 cell counts, as well as lower plasma albumin levels. Adverse foetal outcomes were more frequent in the IVF-ET group (stillbirth: 62.5% vs 1.7%; preterm birth: 31.2% vs 8.5%, both P < 0.001). IVF-ET was the strongest independent predictor of adverse outcomes (adjusted OR=59.42, P = 0.002), with the predictive model achieving an AUC of 0.868 (optimism-corrected AUC of 0.817).
CONCLUSION: Tuberculosis following IVF-ET is associated with exacerbated disease severity and adverse foetal outcomes, accompanied by reduced cellular immune status and a poorer nutritional-inflammatory profile at presentation (e.g., lower CD3+/CD4+ T-cell counts and albumin levels). Pre-IVF TB screening and heightened vigilance during pregnancy are critical for risk mitigation.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Female
- Pregnancy
- Retrospective Studies
- Adult
- Fertilization in Vitro
- China
- Embryo Transfer
- Pregnancy Complications, Infectious
- Risk Factors
- Pregnancy Outcome
- Tuberculosis
- Premature Birth
- Stillbirth