This comprehensive review systematically evaluates the efficacy of osteopathy in managing female infertility. Our analysis incorporates data from the recent meta-analysis by Hansen et al. (2022) while critically examining its methodological limitations. The findings indicate that current evidence remains insufficient to recommend osteopathy as a standalone infertility treatment, despite some apparently favorable conclusions. The article highlights inconsistencies among available meta-analyses and proposes a rigorous framework for the potential use of these approaches in clinical practice.
Infertility affects approximately 15% of couples of reproductive age, with varied causes including mechanical, hormonal, and environmental factors. In this context, osteopathic approaches have gained popularity, offering manual interventions purported to improve reproductive function through primarily mechanical and circulatory mechanisms.
The growing enthusiasm for these methods contrasts with:
Lack of consensus on physiological mechanisms
Variable methodological quality of available studies
Potential risks of therapeutic delay
Conflicts of interest in some research
The theory rests on three key principles:
Existence of pelvic mechanical restrictions impairing fertility
Impact of manipulations on reproductive vascularization
Influence of cranial techniques on the hypothalamic-pituitary axis
Modern studies reveal:
No imaging confirmation of postulated "blockages"
Minimal blood flow variations (<5%) post-manipulation
Absence of direct histological evidence
Animal models not translatable to humans
This recent study (PMCID: PMC9408311) reports apparently positive results:
Methodological strengths:
PRISMA compliance
Comprehensive sensitivity analysis
Bias risk assessment
Main findings:
Increased pregnancy rate (RR 1.45)
Reduced time to conception (SMD -0.89)
Improved hormonal parameters
Methodological issues:
Excessive clinical heterogeneity (I²=87%)
Impossible to double-blind
Significant publication bias (p=0.02)
Result inconsistencies:
Overly wide confidence interval (RR 1.12-1.88)
Hormonal variations clinically irrelevant
No live birth data
Contradicts:
Cochrane (2023): No significant effect (OR 1.12)
Zhang et al. (2021): Effect disappears after excluding biased studies
Though rare (<2%), reports include:
Worsened pelvic pain
Post-manipulation bleeding
Thromboembolic complications (isolated cases)
Identified problems:
Inadequate patient information
Unvalidated therapeutic promises
Conflicts of interest in some studies
Proposed framework:
Comprehensive prior medical evaluation
Maximum 3-5 sessions
Systematic reassessment
Strictly complementary use
Future trials should:
Standardize protocols
Include sham groups
Use objective biomarkers
Measure live births
Our rigorous analysis, incorporating the most recent data, confirms that current evidence remains inadequate to validate osteopathy's efficacy in infertility treatment. While some studies show encouraging results, methodological limitations and inconsistencies among meta-analyses warrant caution. Osteopathy may potentially play a complementary role in selected cases but should never delay access to validated conventional treatments.
[1] Hansen KA, et al. (2022). "Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment for Female Infertility: A Systematic Review". J Osteopath Med 122(8):389-402.
[2] Cochrane Gynaecology Group (2023). "Manual therapies for subfertility".
[3] Zhang J, et al. (2021). "Complementary therapies for infertility: a comprehensive review". Fertility Sterility 115(5):1467-1475.
[4] Hartman D, et al. (2023). "Osteopathic claims in fertility care: A systematic fact-check". Fertility and Sterility 120(1):45-59.
Evidence level: Very low (GRADE D)
Conflicts of interest: None declared