Meta-analysis examines acupuncture in IVF patients with POR or DOR

Researchers in a 2026 meta-analysis combined 15 randomized trials in women with POR or DOR and found that while some forms of acupuncture were linked to slightly more eggs retrieved, they didnโ€™t improve pregnancy rates.

Women with a poor ovarian response (POR) to stimulation typically have only a few eggs retrieved during an IVF cycle. POR is more common with advancing age and is often associated with diminished ovarian reserve (DOR).

Acupuncture is often used as an add-on therapy in IVF to potentially improve success rates, but previous studies have produced inconsistent results.

A meta-analysis by Liu et al. (2026) combined the results of 15 randomized trials to see if acupuncture around the time of ovarian stimulation can improve outcomes for POR/DOR patients. The study compared different forms of acupuncture, including TEAS (transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation), manual acupuncture, and electroacupuncture.

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Study details

  • Study design: Systematic review and network meta-analysis of 15 randomized controlled trials published up to September 2023 (mainly in China).
  • Participants: 1,195 women with POR or DOR undergoing IVF (595 received acupuncture, 600 controls). There was no standardized definition for POR or DOR.
  • Primary outcome: Clinical pregnancy rate.

Clinical pregnancy rate did not improve with acupuncture

This meta-analysis included 15 randomized controlled trials, 11 of which reported clinical pregnancy rate (875 participants). When these trials were pooled, none of the acupuncture techniques improved clinical pregnancy rate:

  • TEAS vs control: No difference (odds ratio [95% CI]: 1.74 [0.76โ€“3.96], 2 RCTs)
  • Electroacupuncture vs control: No difference (OR 1.55 [0.89โ€“2.68], 5 RCTs)
  • Manual acupuncture vs control: No difference (OR 1.32 [0.71โ€“2.45], 4 RCTs)

Other ovarian markers showed limited improvement with acupuncture

The meta-analysis also examined the number of eggs retrieved, AFC, AMH, etc. to see if acupuncture could improve these outcomes in POR/DOR patients. Most comparisons showed no significant difference between acupuncture and control, but there were some differences:

  • Number of oocytes retrieved: On average, about 2.2 more eggs were retrieved with TEAS vs control (mean difference 2.22 [95% CI: 1.59โ€“2.85], 4 RCTs).
  • Number of mature oocytes retrieved: On average, about 0.7 more mature eggs were retrieved with manual acupuncture vs control (mean difference 0.66 [0.08โ€“1.25], 3 RCTs).
  • AFC: Increased by about 1.5 follicles with TEAS vs control (mean difference 1.46 [1.06โ€“1.86], 4 RCTs).
  • AMH: No difference
  • FSH: No difference

No safety concerns with acupuncture

Six RCTs evaluated safety issues with acupuncture, with only a few mild side effects noted (ie. mild allergy, bruising, pain).

Conclusion

In patients with POR/DOR, acupuncture didnโ€™t improve clinical pregnancy rates. Live birth rates werenโ€™t included in any of the studies.

Some acupuncture methods were associated with increases in the number of eggs retrieved and AFC, and reported side effects were mild and uncommon.

Biologically, the authors propose that acupuncture can influence the hypothalamicโ€“pituitaryโ€“ovarian axis, stress pathways, or ovarian blood flow, but these mechanisms remain theoretical and werenโ€™t directly tested.

There were a few major limitations to this meta-analysis:

  • POR and DOR were not defined consistently across studies.
  • No study reported live birth.
  • Most trials were small and conducted in one country.
  • No blinding so researchers knew who received acupuncture.

These limitations make it hard to draw real conclusions about how effective acupuncture is for POR/DOR patients.

Acupuncture appears to be low risk, and this study shows that it could influence ovarian response to produce more eggs for POR/DOR patients, but this didnโ€™t translate into improved pregnancy rates. Larger and better-designed studies in more diverse populations are needed to see if acupuncture can result in real changes to live birth.

Want to read more about POR or DOR?

Reference

Liu J, Mai T, Zhu F, Ma J, Liu D, Liu Y, Ouyang X, Wu J. Acupuncture in patients with the poor ovarian response on IVF-ET: A systematic review and network meta-analysis. Medicine (Baltimore). 2026 Jan 30;105(5):e46728. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000046728. PMID: 41630228; PMCID: PMC12863927.

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About Embryoman

Embryoman (Sean Lauber) is a former embryologist and the founder of Remembryo, an IVF research and fertility education website. After working in an IVF lab in the US, he returned to Canada and now focuses on making fertility research more accessible. He holds a Masterโ€™s in Immunology and launched Remembryo in 2018 to help patients and professionals make sense of IVF research. Sean shares weekly study updates on Facebook, Instagram, and Reddit regularly. He also answers questions on Reddit or in his private Facebook group.


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