Skip to main content
Skip to main content
Back to Grand Rounds
Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Obstetrics & Gynecology

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • Single-gene NIPT panels show very high accuracy but must remain confirmatory-test–backed screening.
  • PAS risk after myomectomy is ~1–2% across approaches, supporting individualized route selection.
  • GLP-1 receptor agonists plus progestins substantially reduce endometrial cancer and hysterectomy in high-risk benign uterine disease.

Week ending February 14, 2026

OB/GYN practice update: prenatal genetics, IVF realities, metabolic prevention, and evolving reproductive care

Single-gene NIPT panels show very high accuracy but remain screening tests

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGYFeb 12, 2026

This systematic review and meta-analysis included 10 studies with 12,577 pregnancies undergoing NIPT panels for dominant single-gene disorders. Pooled positivity was low at 2.2%, but positive results were highly reliable with a PPV of 93.8%. Sensitivity reached 94.5% and specificity 99.7%, with an AUC of 0.98, indicating excellent discrimination. Positivity rates were highest in high-risk populations, but accuracy remained strong across risk strata.

PAS risk after myomectomy is elevated but similar across surgical approaches

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGYFeb 8, 2026

This systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized 76 studies with 11,065 pregnancies after myomectomy with documented surgical route. Overall PAS prevalence after myomectomy was about 1–2%, higher than the 0.17% background rate in the general obstetric population. PAS prevalence numerically peaked after open myomectomy (2%) but did not differ significantly from laparoscopic, robotic, or hysteroscopic approaches. Postpartum hemorrhage, placenta previa, abruption, and uterine rupture showed similarly low prevalence across routes.

GLP-1RA plus progestin linked to large reductions in endometrial cancer and hysterectomy

JAMA NETWORK OPENFeb 10, 2026

This TriNetX cohort compared 18,414 women receiving GLP-1RA plus progestin with 426,406 on progestin alone for benign uterine disease or endometrial hyperplasia. GLP-1RA plus progestins was associated with substantially lower endometrial cancer risk than progestin monotherapy (HR 0.34, 95% CI 0.27–0.44). Risk reduction was consistent across progestin routes, baseline risk levels, BMI, and age strata. Combination therapy and triple therapy also reduced endometrial cancer compared with metformin-based regimens and lowered hysterectomy rates at 2 and 5 years.

Transdermal testosterone does not improve IVF pregnancy rates in diminished ovarian reserve

NATURE COMMUNICATIONSFeb 13, 2026

This triple-blind RCT randomized 288 women with diminished ovarian reserve to ~9 weeks of 5.5 mg transdermal testosterone or placebo before IVF. All patients underwent a standardized long GnRH-agonist protocol with high-dose hMG and fresh embryo transfer when available. Clinical pregnancy rates were nearly identical (15.7% testosterone vs 14.9% placebo; RR 1.05, 95% CI 0.61–1.81). A prespecified interim futility analysis prompted early termination, making a clinically meaningful benefit very unlikely.

References

Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • High-performance NIPT for dominant single-gene disorders is ready for targeted use, with clear counseling about screening versus diagnosis.
  • Myomectomy history confers several-fold higher PAS risk than background, without clear differentiation by surgical route.
  • Metabolic modulation with GLP-1RAs appears strongly protective for endometrial cancer in high-risk benign uterine conditions.