
Contemporary OB/GYN week in review: alcohol use, cardiac rehabilitation, and more
Review some of the top stories from the Contemporary OB/GYN website over the past week and catch up on anything you may have missed.
This week at Contemporary OB/GYN®, we covered topics ranging from how PCOS subtypes can allow individualized care to fosfomycin's approval for treating cUTIs. Click the links below to read anything you might have missed from Monday, November 10, to Friday, November 14, 2025.
Prenatal alcohol use linked to increased offspring addiction risk
During a discussion with Contemporary OB/GYN, Rajesh Miranda, PhD, and Jun Wang, PhD, professors at Texas A&M University College of Medicine, outlined emerging data on the neurodevelopmental consequences of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) and its potential mechanistic links to later-life addiction vulnerability.
Miranda began by emphasizing that PAE has been well documented for nearly 4 decades to produce consistent structural and functional alterations in the developing fetus. In both human populations and animal models, these effects typically manifest as fetal and childhood growth restriction, low birth weight, and an array of neurobehavioral impairments.
Wang expanded on these observations by presenting new mechanistic findings derived from collaborative work with Miranda's group. His research focuses on cholinergic interneurons—specialized neurons that release acetylcholine and are essential for cognitive flexibility and adaptive behavioral responses.
Jessica Golbus, MD, highlights ways to boost cardiac rehabilitation participation
In a discussion with Contemporary OB/GYN, Jessica Golbus, MD, assistant professor at University of Michigan Health, highlighted findings from a recent American Heart Association (AHA) scientific statement addressing the gender gap in cardiac rehabiliation (CR) participation and proposing strategies to enhance engagement among women.
CR offers substantial benefits for both men and women, including reductions in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, improved quality of life, and overall better health outcomes. Despite these well-established advantages, women remain significantly underrepresented in CR participation and completion rates.
Golbus explained that the AHA statement focuses on identifying barriers to CR participation specific to women and evaluating evidence-based strategies to overcome them. These barriers occur at multiple levels: individual, interpersonal or societal, and programmatic or health-system.
Deborah Anderson, PhD, calls for expanded contraception access
Deborah Anderson, PhD, professor at Boston University, has emphasized the critical importance of contraception and the urgent need for renewed global commitment to its accessibility, education, and innovation.
In a discussion with Contemporary OB/GYN, she noted that contraception is increasingly under political and social scrutiny, often targeted alongside abortion, despite its proven benefits for women’s health, family well-being, and economic stability. Contraceptive access allows families to plan and space pregnancies, reduces maternal health risks, and helps prevent abortions by avoiding unintended pregnancies in the first place.
Currently, approximately 75% of women worldwide have access to modern contraception, yet 200 million women remain without it. Even among those with access, many experience unintended pregnancies because of inconsistent or incorrect use. Anderson highlighted that half of all pregnancies globally are unintended, and 97% of these result from contraceptive misuse or nonuse—a striking gap between availability and effective use.
Study reveals implantation and live birth rates for segmental aneuploid embryos
Stephanie Willson, MD, of the IVI RMA Global Research Alliance and a 2025 graduate of the Jefferson-RMA Fellowship Program, discussed new data on the reproductive potential of non-mosaic segmental aneuploid embryos at ASRM 2025 Scientific Congress.
Her team’s double-blinded, multicenter non-selection study evaluated 176 single frozen embryo transfers to clarify how segmental aneuploid findings on preimplantation genetic testing should be interpreted in clinical practice. The results provide long-awaited prospective evidence on implantation, live birth rates, and the role of segmental aneuploid embryo transfer when no euploid embryos are available.
Endometriosis found to impact automatic nervous system
The function of the autonomic nervous system is impacted by endometriosis, according to a recent study published in Hypertension.
A significant reduction in blood pressure response was reported in women with endometriosis exposed to exercise or submerging their hand in cold water vs those without endometriosis. According to investigators, this may have significant implications for diagnosing and managing endometriosis.
“Medical science understands very little about endometriosis, so in order to diagnose and treat the disease effectively, we need to grasp the full scope of the disease and what it is doing to women throughout their bodies,” said Auni Williams, postdoctoral fellow at Penn State.
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