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Pre and post operative medical therapy for endometriosis surgery
Pre and post operative medical therapy
for endometriosis surgery (Cochrane Review)
Yap C, Furness S, Farquhar C
ABSTRACT
- A substantive amendment to this systematic review was
last made on 26 May 2004. Cochrane reviews are regularly checked and
updated if necessary.
- Background: Endometriosis is a common gynaecological
condition which affects approximately 10% of women of reproductive age
(Askenazi 1997). There is a range of symptoms and most commonly women
present with dysmenorrhoea, pelvic pain, infertility or a pelvic mass.
Direct visualisation and biopsy during laparoscopy or laparotomy is the
gold standard diagnostic test for this condition and enables the
gynaecologist to identify the location, extent and severity of the
disease. Surgical therapy can be performed concurrently with diagnostic
surgery and may include removal (excision) or destruction (ablation) of
endometriotic tissue, division of adhesions and removal of endometriotic
cysts. Laparoscopic excision or ablation of endometriosis has been shown
to be effective in the management of pain in mild-moderate endometriosis.
Adjunctive medical treatment pre or post-operatively may prolong the
symptom-free interval.
- Objectives: To determine the effectiveness of systemic medical
therapies used for hormonal suppression before or after surgery for
endometriosis, or before and after surgery for endometriosis in the
eradication of endometriosis, improvement of symptoms, pregnancy rates
and overall tolerability by comparing them with no treatment or placebo.
- Search strategy: We searched the Cochrane Menstrual Disorders and
Subfertility group trials register (searched 10 September 2003), the
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane
Library Issue 3 2003), MEDLINE (January 1966 to September 2003), EMBASE
(January 1985 to September 2003) and reference lists of articles. We
also contacted researchers in the field.
- Selection criteria: Trials were included if they were randomised
controlled trials of the use of systemic medical therapies for hormonal
suppression before or after, or before and after surgery for
endometriosis.
- Data collection and analysis: Data extraction and quality assessment
was performed independently by using relative risk or weighted mean
difference and 95% confidence intervals.
- Main results: Eleven trials were included in the review. One study
comparing pre-surgical medical therapy with surgery alone showed a
significant improvement in AFS scores in the medical therapy group (WMD
-9.60, 95% CI -11.42 to -7.78) but this may or may not be associated
with better outcomes for the patients. Post surgical hormonal
suppression of endometriosis compared to surgery alone (either no
medical therapy or placebo) showed no benefit for the outcomes of pain
or pregnancy rates but a significant improvement in disease recurrence
(AFS scores (WMD -2.30, 95% CI -4.02 to -0.58)). There were no trials
identified in the search that compared hormonal suppression of
endometriosis before and after surgery with surgery alone. There is no
significant difference between pre surgery hormonal suppression and post
surgery hormonal suppression for the outcome of pain in the one trial
identified (RR 1.01, 95% CI 0.49 to 2.07). Information concerning AFS
scores and ease of surgery was reported only as a descriptive summary so
any difference between the groups can not be quantified from the
information in the report of this trial.
- Reviewers' conclusions: There is insufficient evidence from the
studies identified to conclude that hormonal suppression in association
with surgery for endometriosis is associated with a significant benefit
with regard to any of the outcomes identified. There may be a benefit of
improvement in AFS scores with the pre-surgical use of medical therapy.
The possible benefit should be weighed in the context of the adverse
effects and costs of these therapies.
- Citation: Yap C, Furness S, Farquhar C. Pre and post operative medical
therapy for endometriosis surgery (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane
Library, Issue 3, 2004. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- From The Cochrane Library, Issue 3, 2004.
Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. All rights reserved.
Copyright Cochrane Library,
reproduced with permission.

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