Female Infertility: Diagnostic Workup and First-Line Management
When to Initiate Evaluation
Begin infertility evaluation after 12 months of regular unprotected intercourse in women under 35 years, but accelerate to 6 months in women aged 35 years or older. 1, 2
- Women ≥35 years experience accelerated fertility decline (approximately 3% per year between ages 35-45), making earlier intervention critical despite only modest improvements in treatment success rates 2, 3
- For women under 35 with regular cycles, waiting 12 months is appropriate because 50% of couples who fail to conceive in the first 6 months will conceive spontaneously in the next 6 months without intervention 4
- Do not wait 12 months if the woman has oligo-amenorrhea, known/suspected tubal disease, endometriosis, or a subfertile male partner 1, 5
Simultaneous Partner Evaluation
Evaluate both partners concurrently from the outset—never assess the female partner in isolation. 1
- Male factors contribute to approximately 50% of infertility cases (26% male factor alone, plus additional cases with combined factors) 6, 1, 5
- Delaying male evaluation wastes time and exposes women to unnecessary testing and interventions 1
- Order semen analysis for the male partner at the same visit you initiate female workup 1
Essential Female Diagnostic Workup
History Components
Document the following specific elements 5:
- Duration of attempted conception and coital frequency/timing
- Menstrual cycle regularity (oligo-amenorrhea suggests ovulatory dysfunction)
- Previous pregnancies, miscarriages, or ectopic pregnancies
- History of pelvic inflammatory disease, STIs (especially chlamydia), or pelvic surgery (indicates tubal factor risk)
- Symptoms of hyperandrogenism (hirsutism, acne—suggests PCOS)
- Galactorrhea or visual changes (suggests hyperprolactinemia)
- Dysmenorrhea or dyspareunia (suggests endometriosis)
- Smoking, alcohol, recreational drugs, caffeine >5 cups/day (all reduce fertility) 5
- Use of commercial vaginal lubricants (most reduce fertility) 5
Physical Examination
Perform targeted assessment 5:
- Calculate BMI (obesity and being underweight both reduce fertility)
- Thyroid palpation (thyroid dysfunction impairs ovulation)
- Signs of hyperandrogenism (hirsutism, acne)
- Pelvic examination for structural abnormalities, adnexal masses, or tenderness
Laboratory Testing
Order the following panel 7, 5:
- Serum FSH, LH, and estradiol (cycle day 2-4) to assess ovarian reserve
- Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) as an additional ovarian reserve marker 7
- TSH to exclude thyroid dysfunction 5
- Prolactin if galactorrhea, irregular cycles, or other symptoms present 5
- Mid-luteal progesterone (cycle day 21 in 28-day cycle) to confirm ovulation 5
Imaging Studies
Transvaginal ultrasound is the initial imaging modality of choice 6:
- Assess antral follicle count (ovarian reserve marker) 6
- Measure ovarian volume (>10 mL suggests PCOS) 6, 5
- Count follicles (>25 small follicles in one ovary suggests PCOS) 6, 5
- Identify uterine abnormalities (fibroids, polyps, congenital anomalies) 6, 7
- Detect endometriomas or other adnexal pathology 6
Hysterosalpingography (HSG) to assess tubal patency should be performed when 6, 5:
- History of pelvic inflammatory disease, STIs, or pelvic surgery exists
- Other causes have been excluded
- Proceeding toward assisted reproductive technology
MRI is not first-line imaging but may be useful for detailed evaluation of Müllerian anomalies or complex endometriosis 6
Common Causes and Their Prevalence
Understanding the distribution helps prioritize evaluation 6, 1, 5:
- Ovulatory disorders: 21% (PCOS accounts for 70% of anovulatory cases)
- Male factor: 26%
- Tubal damage: 14% (often from chlamydia or PID)
- Endometriosis: affects 33% of infertile women
- Unexplained: 28%
First-Line Management Based on Findings
If Elevated BMI with Otherwise Normal Workup
Prescribe intensive lifestyle modification as definitive first-line therapy 1:
- Weight reduction through diet and exercise (obesity directly reduces fertility)
- Smoking cessation (mandatory)
- Eliminate alcohol and recreational drugs
- Reduce caffeine to <5 cups daily
- Discontinue commercial vaginal lubricants
- Educate about the 6-day fertile window ending on ovulation day (characterized by stretchy cervical mucus) 1
- Recommend intercourse every 1-2 days starting soon after menses 1
- Reassess after 6 months in women ≥35 years 1
Do not offer bariatric surgery or GLP-1 agonists as first-line infertility management 1
If Anovulation/Oligo-ovulation Identified
- Refer to reproductive endocrinology for ovulation induction (typically clomiphene citrate or letrozole as first-line agents)
- Address underlying causes (PCOS, thyroid dysfunction, hyperprolactinemia) 5
If Tubal Factor Suspected or Confirmed
- Refer to reproductive endocrinology for consideration of tubal surgery versus IVF 5
- Laparoscopy may be both diagnostic and therapeutic for endometriosis 6
If Male Factor Identified
- Refer male partner to urology for further evaluation and management 1
If Unexplained Infertility
- Refer to reproductive endocrinology after completing basic workup 1
- Treatment typically progresses from ovarian stimulation with intrauterine insemination to IVF
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Do not delay evaluation in women ≥35 years—the 6-month threshold is evidence-based given age-related fertility decline 1, 2
- Do not evaluate only the female partner—concurrent male assessment is mandatory 1
- Do not assume regular cycles guarantee fertility in women approaching age 40 7
- Do not perform fertility workup before 12 months in women <35 with regular cycles and no risk factors, as this increases false-positive diagnoses and exposes couples to unnecessary treatment complications (ovarian hyperstimulation, multiple pregnancies) 4
- Do not give false reassurance that lifestyle modification alone will resolve all cases—set realistic expectations and timelines for reassessment 1
When to Refer to Reproductive Endocrinology
Immediate referral is warranted for 1, 7:
- Women aged ≥40 years (more immediate evaluation and treatment needed) 2
- Women aged 35-39 after 6 months of failed conception 1, 2
- Women aged 45-55 with any infertility duration 7
- Known severe male factor
- Known tubal occlusion
- Diminished ovarian reserve (elevated FSH, low AMH, low antral follicle count)
- Failed ovulation induction in primary care setting
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