BackgroundEndometriosis is found in 0.5-5% of fertile women and 25-40% of infertile women. It is known that endometriosis is associated with infertility, but there is uncertainty whether women with endometriosis have adverse pregnancy outcomes in in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. ObjectivesTo explore the association between endometriosis and IVF outcome. Search strategySearches were conducted on MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library and Web of Science (inception, December 2012) in all languages, together with reference lists of retrieved papers. Selection criteriaStudies comparing IVF outcome in women with endometriosis with women without endometriosis. Patients were classified by stage of endometriosis. The outcomes were fertilisation, implantation, clinical pregnancy and live birth rates. Study selection was conducted independently by two reviewers. The Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale was used for quality assessment. Data collection and analysisData extraction was conducted independently by two reviewers. Relative risks from individual studies were meta-analysed. Main resultsTwenty-seven observational studies were included, comprising 8984 women. Meta-analysis of these studies showed that fertilisation rates were reduced in stage I/II of endometriosis (relative risk [RR]=0.93, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.87-0.99, P=0.03). There was a decrease in the implantation rate (RR=0.79, 95% CI 0.67-0.93, P=0.006) and clinical pregnancy rate (RR=0.79, 95% CI 0.69-0.91, P=0.0008) in women with stage III/IV endometriosis undergoing IVF treatment. ConclusionThe presence of severe endometriosis (stage III/IV) is associated with poor implantation and clinical pregnancy rates in women undergoing IVF treatment.