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The Peter Attia Drive

#397 ‒ Endometriosis and adenomyosis: diagnosis, fertility, reproductive aging, and emerging treatments | Renato Tomioka, M.D., Ph.D.

The Peter Attia Drive

Peter Attia, MD

Fitness, Health & Fitness, Medicine

4.39K Ratings

🗓️ 22 June 2026

⏱️ 119 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

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Renato Tomioka is a leading expert in reproductive medicine and gynecologic surgery whose unique skills allow him to diagnose and treat some of the most impactful yet frequently overlooked conditions affecting women's health. In this episode, Renato explores endometriosis and adenomyosis, explaining what these conditions are, why they often go undiagnosed for years despite affecting millions of women worldwide, and how advances in MRI and specialized ultrasound are transforming diagnosis beyond traditional surgical laparoscopy. He discusses the decision-making process behind hormonal therapy versus surgery, how treatment strategies change when fertility preservation is a priority, and where IVF fits into the care pathway for women with endometriosis, adenomyosis, or age-related fertility decline. Renato also examines the profound effects of female age on egg quality and quantity, including the accelerating rise in chromosomal abnormalities after age 35, highlights common mistakes in both surgical and fertility management, and shares promising developments on the horizon for treating these conditions and preserving fertility.

Follow Dr. Tomioka's work: Instagram: @dr.renatotomioka; Website: Renato Tomioka, M.D., Ph.D.

We discuss:

  • 0:00:00 - Intro
  • 0:00:11 - Endometriosis: definition, prevalence, infertility risk, and theories of disease development
  • 0:09:03 - The biology of endometriosis: estrogen dependence, progesterone resistance, and tumor-like growth mechanisms
  • 0:13:25 - Adenomyosis explained: how it differs from endometriosis, why it develops, and its impact on reproductive health
  • 0:18:52 - Recognizing endometriosis and adenomyosis: the "6 Ds" of endometriosis and key differences in clinical presentation
  • 0:22:09 - Uterine fibroids: classification, symptoms, and the importance of fibroid location for bleeding and fertility
  • 0:24:09 - Understanding endometriosis pain: lesion-driven pain, nerve involvement, central sensitization, and the importance of early treatment
  • 0:28:26 - Endometriosis in young women: rising prevalence, delayed diagnosis, and barriers to care
  • 0:33:11 - Modern diagnosis of endometriosis: specialized ultrasound, MRI, and the decline of diagnostic laparoscopy
  • 0:45:52 - Clinical case example #1: Managing endometriosis in a young woman seeking pain relief while preserving future fertility
  • 0:54:10 - Clinical case example #2: Comparing treatment strategies for symptom control versus fertility
  • 1:01:24 - Endometriosis and fertility: the roles of age, embryo quality, IVF, and surgery
  • 1:11:50 - Clinical case example #3: Managing adenomyosis after failed IVF transfers to improve implantation and pregnancy outcomes
  • 1:20:51 - The funding gap in endometriosis research: disease burden, economic impact, and growing awareness
  • 1:22:01 - Clinical case example #4: Surgical decision-making in endometriosis—balancing pain relief, fertility preservation, and common treatment pitfalls
  • 1:27:43 - Common misconceptions about fertility: maternal age, embryo aneuploidy, the inefficiency of human reproduction, and the limits of IVF
  • 1:34:23 - Elective egg freezing: timing, success rates, the fertility funnel, and the tradeoffs of fertility preservation
  • 1:45:49 - Emerging fertility technologies: mitochondrial replacement, ovarian tissue preservation, stem-cell-derived eggs, and current limitations
  • 1:55:10 - The future of endometriosis treatment: new guidelines, biologic therapies, and unanswered questions about IVF
  • 1:58:30 - Why earlier diagnosis matters: reducing years of suffering from endometriosis and adenomyosis

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone. Welcome to the Drive podcast. I'm your host, Peter Attia. This podcast, my website, and my weekly newsletter all focus on the goal of translating the science of longevity into something accessible for everyone.

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1:02.1

head over to peteratia m.com forward slash subscribe.

1:09.4

My guest this week is Dr. Hanato Tomioka, a leading expert in reproductive medicine and gynecologic surgery.

1:11.7

Hanato's clinical work sits at the intersection of three closely related fields. Reproductive

1:17.7

medicine, minimally invasive gynecologic surgery, and gynecologic endocrinology, a combination

1:23.8

that makes him uniquely equipped to diagnose and treat some of the most consequential

1:28.1

and under-recognized conditions women face today. Endometriosis affects roughly 10% of

1:35.5

reproductive aged women, about 200 million women globally, and contributes to infertility in 30 to 50%

1:42.9

of cases. Adnomyosis, its often overlooked counterpart,

1:47.4

maybe even more prevalent. Yet the average woman waits five to 12 years for a diagnosis,

1:54.0

often because her pain has been dismissed as normal. In my conversation with Hanato, we cover

1:59.7

what endometriosis and adenomyosis actually are,

2:03.4

and why they're so often missed, and how diagnosis has shifted from surgical laparoscopy

2:08.9

towards MRI and specialized ultrasound, how Hanato decides between hormonal therapy and surgery,

2:15.7

and how those decisions change when fertility is part of the

...

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