
Fertility-Sparing Treatment for Adenomyosis: Pregnancy Chances, Symptom Relief, and Pregnancy Risks
Compare excision and non-excisional options (HIFU, RFA, UAE), when to add hormones, and how to plan a safer pregnancy after treatment.

If you have adenomyosis and you want a pregnancy (now or someday), you’re often forced into unfair trade-offs: “control the pain and bleeding” versus “protect the uterus,” and “do something definitive” versus “don’t do anything that could raise pregnancy risk.” It can feel like every option is either too small to matter or too big to risk.
The good news is that uterus-sparing (“conservative”) treatments—both surgical and non-surgical—are increasingly used for people who want to preserve fertility. The harder news is that results vary a lot depending on your type of adenomyosis (focal vs diffuse), where it sits in the uterus, and how thick/affected your junctional zone is. Recent evidence suggests that more than one approach can sometimes lead to pregnancy, but the “best” choice is highly individualized.
Below is a practical guide to the main fertility-sparing options, what pregnancy outcomes look like in real life, what risks to plan for, and what to ask your doctor so you can make a decision you feel at peace with.
Why adenomyosis matters for fertility—and not just because of symptoms
Adenomyosis isn’t only about heavy bleeding and cramping. It can also affect fertility and pregnancy, partly because it can change how the uterus contracts, how inflammation behaves inside the uterine muscle, and how receptive the lining is for embryo implantation. For some people, adenomyosis is “silent” until infertility workups; for others, it’s years of debilitating symptoms before fertility even becomes the question.
One frustrating layer: diagnosis and classification aren’t perfectly standardized. That means one radiology report may call it “diffuse adenomyosis,” another may emphasize “junctional zone thickening,” and another may label a “focal adenomyoma.” Those words matter, because they often predict which treatments are most realistic—and what pregnancy planning should look like afterward.
Option 1: Excisional surgery (adenomyomectomy) — removing adenomyosis while keeping the uterus
What it is: An adenomyomectomy is a fertility-sparing operation where a surgeon cuts out adenomyosis tissue and reconstructs the uterine wall. This is most straightforward when disease is visibly focal (a defined adenomyoma) and more complex when disease is diffuse (widespread involvement of the uterine muscle).
How well it can work for pregnancy: If you have focal adenomyosis, reported outcomes can be encouraging: pregnancy rates over 50% and live birth rates up to about 70% have been described in selected patients. Results are generally less successful in diffuse adenomyosis, where it may be impossible to fully remove disease without weakening the uterus.
What this means for you in practice:
If imaging suggests a well-defined focal lesion—and you have infertility or repeated implantation failure—excisional surgery may be one of the more “direct” ways to change the anatomy and inflammatory environment. But it’s not a casual procedure. Surgeon skill, technique, and reconstruction quality matter enormously, and not every center has deep experience.
Downsides and trade-offs: Excisional adenomyoma surgery can involve blood loss, adhesions, and recovery time. And because it intentionally cuts into uterine muscle, future pregnancy monitoring and delivery planning are not optional—they’re essential (more on this below). Also, evidence suggests that all adenomyosis is at least partly diffuse in addition to the focal adenomyomas. Excision of diffuse adenomyosis is not possible and symptoms can persist after adenomyomectomy if there is enough diffuse adenomyosis remaining after surgery.
Option 2: Non-excisional uterus-sparing procedures (HIFU, RFA, UAE) — treating without cutting out tissue
Not everyone is a good candidate for cutting surgery, and not everyone wants it. There are non-excisional options that aim to shrink, inactivate, or devascularize adenomyosis without removing it.
HIFU (High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound)
What it is: Focused ultrasound energy heats targeted tissue to cause coagulation/necrosis, guided by imaging (often MRI or ultrasound).
Pregnancy outcomes you might hear quoted: In selected patients, pregnancy rates around 40–53% and live birth rates around 35–74% have been reported across studies and techniques. The range is wide for a reason: patient selection, adenomyosis subtype, and definitions of “success” vary.
RFA (Radiofrequency Ablation)
What it is: A probe delivers energy directly to heat and ablate adenomyosis tissue, often with ultrasound guidance (transvaginal or transcervical approaches exist).
Why patients consider it: It can be less invasive than excision and may reduce symptoms with shorter recovery for some people.
UAE (Uterine Artery Embolization)
What it is: An interventional radiology procedure that blocks blood supply to uterine tissue to reduce symptoms and shrink lesions.
Special fertility note: UAE is more established for fibroids than adenomyosis, and fertility planning can be more nuanced. If future pregnancy is a priority, you’ll want a very explicit discussion about ovarian reserve, placental risks, and local expertise with UAE in fertility-preservation scenarios.
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Schedule Your ConsultationAre non-excisional approaches “as good” as excision for fertility?
A major reality check from pooled evidence is this: some analyses find no statistically significant differences in pregnancy, live birth, or miscarriage rates between excisional and non-excisional approaches. That doesn’t mean they’re identical for you—it means there isn’t definitive proof that one category always wins. Your lesion type (focal vs diffuse), location, and junctional zone changes often drive the decision more than the “brand name” of the procedure.
Add-on hormone therapy: why your doctor may recommend “combo” treatment
Many patients are surprised when the plan is not “procedure and done,” but procedure + hormones, especially around the time of trying to conceive or doing IVF. It is generally best to view it as a process and not an event.
What’s commonly used: GnRH agonists are frequently discussed as an adjunct (before or after a conservative procedure). The goal is usually to suppress estrogen temporarily, calm inflammation, and reduce adenomyosis activity.
How it can feel in real life: GnRH agonists can bring menopause-like side effects (hot flashes, mood changes, sleep disruption, low libido), and sometimes “add-back” therapy is used to make it tolerable. The reason it still comes up is that adjunct hormonal therapy appears to improve outcomes in some settings—especially when paired with a fertility plan (timed conception or IVF).
If you’re exhausted by years of hormonal trial-and-error, it’s okay to say: “I need the shortest effective course,” or “I need a plan that protects my mental health.” You deserve a regimen you can actually live through.
Pregnancy risks after fertility-sparing treatment: the part you should plan for, not fear
Preserving the uterus doesn’t always mean a “normal-risk” pregnancy afterward. Conservative surgery and even some non-excisional treatments can change the uterine wall and placentation environment.
Two risks deserve direct discussion:
Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS): Abnormal placental attachment that can cause severe bleeding at delivery. The risk isn’t the same for everyone, but it’s important enough that you should be counseled and monitored.
Uterine rupture: Reported rates up to about 6% have been described in some series after conservative surgery, especially with diffuse disease and deeper uterine wall reconstruction. That number can sound terrifying—but what matters most is how your individual risk is assessed and managed.
What planning often looks like: close imaging surveillance in pregnancy, delivery in a hospital prepared for complex obstetrics, and in many cases planned cesarean rather than labor. Your doctor should be able to explain why they’re recommending a specific delivery plan based on your surgical history and uterine repair.
How to choose the right approach for your adenomyosis (and avoid generic advice)
The most important predictors mentioned across clinical experience and evidence are often:
- Type: focal vs diffuse
- Location: where in the uterus the lesion sits (and how deep)
- Junctional zone thickness/extent of involvement
If you only take one action step from this article, let it be this: ask your clinician to translate your imaging into a fertility plan. Not just “you have adenomyosis,” but what kind, how extensive, and what that means for each option.
Questions to ask your doctor (bring these to your next visit)
- “Based on my imaging, is this mostly focal or diffuse adenomyosis? Where is it located, and how thick is the junctional zone?”
- “Am I a candidate for adenomyomectomy?”
- “Would you consider HIFU, RFA, or UAE for someone trying to preserve fertility like me? What makes me a good or poor candidate?”
- “What pregnancy and live birth rates do you typically see in patients like me (same subtype/age/IVF history), not just overall averages?”
- “Would you recommend GnRH agonist therapy or another hormonal approach around treatment? For how long, and how will side effects be managed?”
- “If I conceive, what is the plan for pregnancy monitoring and delivery? Do you recommend planned C-section, and at what gestational age?”
Reality check: what we still don’t know (and why your results may differ)
Even though there’s a growing body of literature, a lot of fertility-sparing adenomyosis data comes from small or retrospective studies, and techniques differ from surgeon to surgeon and center to center. There are also few robust randomized trials, so “best option” is rarely a simple, universal answer.
That uncertainty isn’t your fault—and it doesn’t mean you’re out of options. It means your best odds often come from:
- accurate characterization of your disease,
- a team experienced in the specific procedure you’re considering, and
- a thoughtful fertility timeline (natural trying vs IVF, whether to suppress first, and how long to wait post-procedure).
References
Ioannidou A, Louis K, Sioutis D, Panagopoulos P, Theofanakis C, Machairiotis N. Conservative Surgical Management of Adenomyosis: Implications for Infertility and Pregnancy Outcomes—A Perspective Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025. DOI: 10.3390/jcm14196956
Quick Answers
What is pelvic dissection in endometriosis surgery?
Pelvic dissection in endometriosis surgery means carefully separating and opening tissue planes in the pelvis so we can clearly see normal anatomy and remove disease safely. Endometriosis can cause inflammation and scarring that “glues” organs together (sometimes called a frozen pelvis), so dissection is often the step where we free adhesions and restore normal relationships between the uterus, ovaries, bowel, bladder, and pelvic sidewalls.
In practical terms, pelvic dissection may include identifying and protecting critical structures like the ureters, bladder, bowel, blood vessels, and pelvic nerves before excising endometriosis at its roots. This is where surgical precision matters: the goal is to fully address disease while minimizing injury to healthy tissue, especially in complex or re-operative cases. If you’re seeing this term on an op note or surgical plan, it usually reflects the complexity of the anatomy and the deliberate work needed to make excision both complete and safe—our team can walk you through exactly what was dissected and why in your specific case.
When is menstrual bleeding considered too heavy?
Menstrual flow is generally “too heavy” when it consistently disrupts your life or overwhelms your usual period products—think flooding or soaking through pads/tampons quickly, passing frequent or large clots, needing to double up, or bleeding long enough that you can’t plan around it. Another major clue is fatigue, dizziness, or shortness of breath that can come with iron deficiency from ongoing blood loss. If you’re timing your day around bathrooms, waking at night to change products, or avoiding work, exercise, travel, or sex because of bleeding, that’s not something we consider “normal.”
Heavy bleeding is a symptom, not a diagnosis, and common underlying drivers include adenomyosis, fibroids, hormonal imbalance, and sometimes endometriosis—especially when heavy bleeding shows up with severe cramps or deep pelvic pain. Because imaging and symptoms don’t always match (a scan can look “mild” while symptoms are intense), we take a symptom-led approach and look at the full pattern, including pain, pressure, clots, cycle timing, and any signs of anemia. If your bleeding feels like it’s escalating or you’ve been told to “just live with it,” our team can help you sort out likely causes and build a plan that targets the source—not just the bleeding.
How does estrogen affect the endometrium?
Estrogen is one of the main hormones that drives endometrial growth. In the first half of the menstrual cycle, rising estrogen signals the endometrium to thicken and rebuild after a period, preparing the uterus for a possible pregnancy. It also influences the local immune and inflammatory environment in the uterus, which is part of why hormonal shifts can change bleeding patterns and pain.
When estrogen’s growth signals are strong—and progesterone’s “calming” effect is weaker than expected (often described as progesterone resistance)—the endometrium can behave in a more persistently inflamed, reactive way. This hormone–inflammation pattern is especially relevant in estrogen-dependent conditions like adenomyosis and endometriosis, where tissue similar to the endometrium can contribute to ongoing symptoms. If you’re trying to make sense of heavy bleeding, severe cramping, or cycle-linked pelvic pain, our team can help you connect the hormonal biology to what you’re feeling and review next steps for diagnosis and treatment.
What does advanced adenomyosis mean?
“Advanced adenomyosis” usually means the adenomyosis is more extensive within the uterine muscle—often involving a larger area (diffuse disease), deeper penetration into the myometrium, and/or more pronounced changes like uterine enlargement and tenderness. It’s not the same as “advanced endometriosis,” because adenomyosis doesn’t spread outside the uterus; “advanced” is more about how much of the uterine wall appears affected and how significantly it’s impacting symptoms.
Because adenomyosis doesn’t have a single universally accepted staging system, different clinicians and radiology reports may use “advanced” to summarize imaging features (ultrasound or MRI) and the overall clinical picture—such as heavy bleeding, severe period pain, pelvic pressure, or fertility challenges. In our practice, we focus less on the label and more on what your imaging suggests (diffuse vs focal/adenomyoma, junctional zone changes, uterine size) and what your goals are (pain control, bleeding control, fertility preservation, or definitive treatment). If you’ve been told you have “advanced adenomyosis,” our team can help you interpret what that means in your specific case and map out next steps.
What does a frozen uterus mean with endometriosis?
A “frozen uterus” isn’t a separate diagnosis—it’s a descriptive term surgeons use when the uterus is essentially stuck in place because endometriosis-related inflammation has caused dense scarring (adhesions). Instead of the uterus moving freely, it may be tethered to nearby structures like the bowel, bladder, ovaries, or pelvic sidewall, sometimes pulling the uterus into an abnormal position and making pelvic anatomy hard to distinguish.
This finding often suggests more advanced disease, such as deep infiltrating endometriosis and/or significant adhesions from prior inflammation or surgery, and it can help explain symptoms like deep pelvic pain, painful sex, bowel or bladder symptoms, or pain that doesn’t match what a routine exam shows. In these cases, surgery is less about “burning spots” and more about carefully restoring normal anatomy—freeing organs, protecting ureters and bowel, and removing endometriosis at its roots. If you’ve been told your uterus is “frozen,” our team can help you understand what that implies for imaging, surgical planning, and which adjacent organs may need to be evaluated as part of a complete excision strategy.

