AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the impact of laparoscopic bowel resection on pelvic pain and quality of life in women with rectosigmoid endometriosis at Aarhus University Hospital.
  • The results showed a significant reduction in pelvic pain and improvement in quality of life one year after surgery, with over 97% of participants following up.
  • Limitations included the observational design and lack of a control group, which may affect the interpretation of results regarding risk factors for outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Surgery for rectosigmoid endometriosis carries a substantial risk of short- and long-term complications, which has to be counterbalanced against the potential effect of the procedure. Prospective data are scarce in the field of deep infiltrating endometriosis surgery.

Objective: The study aimed to assess pelvic pain and quality of life before and after laparoscopic bowel resection for rectosigmoid endometriosis.

Design: The study involved prospectively collected data regarding pelvic pain and quality of life before and after surgery.

Settings: It was conducted at a tertiary endometriosis referral unit at Aarhus University Hospital.

Patients: A total of 175 women were included.

Intervention: Patients underwent laparoscopic bowel resection for endometriosis.

Main Outcome Measures: Questionnaires for pain (Numerical Rating Scale) and quality of life (RAND Short Form-36) were answered before and 1 year after surgery. Data on analgesic and hormone treatment were collected. Preoperative and postoperative pelvic pain and quality-of-life scores were compared, and risk factors for improvement/worsening were identified.

Results: A total of 97.1% of the women completed the 1-year follow up. A significant decrease (p = 0.0001) was observed on all pelvic pain parameters. Most profound was the decrease in dyschezia. A significant improvement on all quality-of-life scores was observed (p = 0.0001). A surgical complication did not have a negative impact on outcome 1 year after surgery. The postoperative outcome was not related to the type of surgery.

Limitations: This is an observational study without a control group. Risk factor data should be interpreted with caution, because the study was relatively underpowered for some of the rare outcomes.

Conclusions: A significant and clinically relevant improvement in pelvic pain and quality of life 1 year after laparoscopic bowel resection for endometriosis was found. We strongly recommend surgery for rectosigmoid endometriosis that is unresponsive to conservative treatment. See Video Abstract at http://links.lww.com/DCR/A472.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/DCR.0000000000000970DOI Listing

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