User login
Cerclage in twin pregnancies reduces perinatal mortality in randomized trial
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, included 30 patients at 8 centers. The investigators stopped the trial early because perinatal mortality occurred more often in the group that did not receive the intervention.
according to a randomized controlled trial. The trial, which was published in theThe research suggests that a combination of physical exam–indicated cerclage, indomethacin, and antibiotics decreased the incidence of spontaneous preterm birth and prolonged the period from diagnosis to delivery by an average of 5.6 weeks, compared with no cerclage.
“We’ve already incorporated this cerclage into our practice and have been able to offer this to pregnant mothers with twins with great success,” senior author Vincenzo Berghella, MD, said in a news release.
“These results have the potential to change practice and help many more women have healthy twin babies,” said Dr. Berghella, director of the division of maternal fetal medicine at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
A shift in perspective
More research is needed to establish a standardized approach, but the trial should “open physicians’ perspectives to think about how, in selected cases and with the proper approach, cerclage can work well,” said Ozhan M. Turan, MD, PhD, director of the division of maternal and fetal medicine and director of fetal therapy and complex obstetric surgery at University of Maryland in Baltimore.
Although many physicians use cerclage for twin pregnancies in select situations, the practice is not well established. “If you look at the guidelines or books, mostly everyone thinks that doing a cerclage in twins is not a good idea,” Dr. Turan said in an interview.
In the present trial, the researchers controlled for many factors and carefully selected patients with no signs of preterm labor or infection. It is not simply a matter of saying, “Do the stitch,” he said. “But it is proven: if you select patients well and use the appropriate approach, then you could improve the outcome.”
The study is the first randomized controlled trial of physical exam–indicated cerclage focused on twins, according to its authors. It enrolled patients between July 2015 and July 2019. In the end, the researchers analyzed data from 30 pregnancies, rather than the originally intended 52. They stopped the trial after a data and safety monitoring board considered it “unethical to continue the study due to the considerable perinatal mortality in one of the arms ... and requested to unmask the arms of the study,” the researchers said.
Perinatal mortality occurred in 18% of neonates in the cerclage group (6 of 34), compared with 77% in the group without cerclage (20 of 26). All perinatal mortality cases were associated with delivery before 24 weeks.
“The small number of participants reflects how rare this condition is among all pregnancies,” first author Amanda Roman, MD, of the division of maternal fetal medicine at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, said in the news release. “But because women were randomized to treatment and nontreatment groups, the results are strong, as confirmed by the independent data and safety monitoring board.”
The researchers enrolled women with twin pregnancies and asymptomatic cervical dilation from 1 to 4 cm before 24 weeks. Exclusion criteria included monochorionic-monoamniotic pregnancy, selective fetal growth restriction, twin-twin transfusion syndrome, major fetal malformation, known genetic anomaly, placenta previa, signs of labor, or clinical chorioamnionitis.
In all, 17 women were randomized to cerclage and 13 to the no-cerclage group. Both groups had similar patient characteristics. About 93% of the twin gestations were diamniotic-dichorionic. Assisted reproductive technology was used by about 36% of the participants, and 20% had a history of singleton preterm birth. Four women assigned to cerclage did not undergo the procedure but were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Two of the four patients had contraindications that occurred soon after randomization (rupture of amniotic membranes and vaginal bleeding), one had a friable cervix, and one declined cerclage after being randomized.
Spontaneous preterm birth before 34 weeks of gestation, the primary outcome, occurred in 12 of 17 women in the cerclage group and in all 13 women in the no-cerclage group (70% vs. 100%).
Trial to assess ultrasound indicated cerclage
“Expectant management with no cerclage is the current standard of care for these women,” Dr. Roman and coauthors wrote. “Despite small sample size, we were able to show a significant benefit to physical exam–indicated cerclage.”
Inability to place the cerclage in one patient due to friable cervix was the only intraoperative complication. “Larger cohorts in singleton pregnancies have informed a 10%-20% risk of intraoperative rupture of the membranes, cervical laceration, and bleeding during the procedure,” the researchers noted.
All women who received cerclage also received indomethacin and antibiotics, although these elements of management were not prespecified. Given the relatively small sample size, it is unclear what role factors such as indomethacin, which was administered to 82% of the cerclage group versus 31% of the no-cerclage group, and antibiotics may have played, said Dr. Turan.
Prospective studies may help clarify how the degree of cervical dilation, gestational age, use of progesterone, or surgical techniques may influence outcomes. In addition, the researchers are enrolling patients in another trial. That study aims to assess whether cerclage reduces the incidence of spontaneous preterm birth in asymptomatic women with twin gestations and cervical length of 15 mm or less diagnosed by transvaginal ultrasound between 16 and 24 weeks of gestation.
The study had no external financial support. The authors had no conflicts of interest. Dr. Turan said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Roman A et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jun. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.047.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, included 30 patients at 8 centers. The investigators stopped the trial early because perinatal mortality occurred more often in the group that did not receive the intervention.
according to a randomized controlled trial. The trial, which was published in theThe research suggests that a combination of physical exam–indicated cerclage, indomethacin, and antibiotics decreased the incidence of spontaneous preterm birth and prolonged the period from diagnosis to delivery by an average of 5.6 weeks, compared with no cerclage.
“We’ve already incorporated this cerclage into our practice and have been able to offer this to pregnant mothers with twins with great success,” senior author Vincenzo Berghella, MD, said in a news release.
“These results have the potential to change practice and help many more women have healthy twin babies,” said Dr. Berghella, director of the division of maternal fetal medicine at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
A shift in perspective
More research is needed to establish a standardized approach, but the trial should “open physicians’ perspectives to think about how, in selected cases and with the proper approach, cerclage can work well,” said Ozhan M. Turan, MD, PhD, director of the division of maternal and fetal medicine and director of fetal therapy and complex obstetric surgery at University of Maryland in Baltimore.
Although many physicians use cerclage for twin pregnancies in select situations, the practice is not well established. “If you look at the guidelines or books, mostly everyone thinks that doing a cerclage in twins is not a good idea,” Dr. Turan said in an interview.
In the present trial, the researchers controlled for many factors and carefully selected patients with no signs of preterm labor or infection. It is not simply a matter of saying, “Do the stitch,” he said. “But it is proven: if you select patients well and use the appropriate approach, then you could improve the outcome.”
The study is the first randomized controlled trial of physical exam–indicated cerclage focused on twins, according to its authors. It enrolled patients between July 2015 and July 2019. In the end, the researchers analyzed data from 30 pregnancies, rather than the originally intended 52. They stopped the trial after a data and safety monitoring board considered it “unethical to continue the study due to the considerable perinatal mortality in one of the arms ... and requested to unmask the arms of the study,” the researchers said.
Perinatal mortality occurred in 18% of neonates in the cerclage group (6 of 34), compared with 77% in the group without cerclage (20 of 26). All perinatal mortality cases were associated with delivery before 24 weeks.
“The small number of participants reflects how rare this condition is among all pregnancies,” first author Amanda Roman, MD, of the division of maternal fetal medicine at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, said in the news release. “But because women were randomized to treatment and nontreatment groups, the results are strong, as confirmed by the independent data and safety monitoring board.”
The researchers enrolled women with twin pregnancies and asymptomatic cervical dilation from 1 to 4 cm before 24 weeks. Exclusion criteria included monochorionic-monoamniotic pregnancy, selective fetal growth restriction, twin-twin transfusion syndrome, major fetal malformation, known genetic anomaly, placenta previa, signs of labor, or clinical chorioamnionitis.
In all, 17 women were randomized to cerclage and 13 to the no-cerclage group. Both groups had similar patient characteristics. About 93% of the twin gestations were diamniotic-dichorionic. Assisted reproductive technology was used by about 36% of the participants, and 20% had a history of singleton preterm birth. Four women assigned to cerclage did not undergo the procedure but were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Two of the four patients had contraindications that occurred soon after randomization (rupture of amniotic membranes and vaginal bleeding), one had a friable cervix, and one declined cerclage after being randomized.
Spontaneous preterm birth before 34 weeks of gestation, the primary outcome, occurred in 12 of 17 women in the cerclage group and in all 13 women in the no-cerclage group (70% vs. 100%).
Trial to assess ultrasound indicated cerclage
“Expectant management with no cerclage is the current standard of care for these women,” Dr. Roman and coauthors wrote. “Despite small sample size, we were able to show a significant benefit to physical exam–indicated cerclage.”
Inability to place the cerclage in one patient due to friable cervix was the only intraoperative complication. “Larger cohorts in singleton pregnancies have informed a 10%-20% risk of intraoperative rupture of the membranes, cervical laceration, and bleeding during the procedure,” the researchers noted.
All women who received cerclage also received indomethacin and antibiotics, although these elements of management were not prespecified. Given the relatively small sample size, it is unclear what role factors such as indomethacin, which was administered to 82% of the cerclage group versus 31% of the no-cerclage group, and antibiotics may have played, said Dr. Turan.
Prospective studies may help clarify how the degree of cervical dilation, gestational age, use of progesterone, or surgical techniques may influence outcomes. In addition, the researchers are enrolling patients in another trial. That study aims to assess whether cerclage reduces the incidence of spontaneous preterm birth in asymptomatic women with twin gestations and cervical length of 15 mm or less diagnosed by transvaginal ultrasound between 16 and 24 weeks of gestation.
The study had no external financial support. The authors had no conflicts of interest. Dr. Turan said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Roman A et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jun. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.047.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, included 30 patients at 8 centers. The investigators stopped the trial early because perinatal mortality occurred more often in the group that did not receive the intervention.
according to a randomized controlled trial. The trial, which was published in theThe research suggests that a combination of physical exam–indicated cerclage, indomethacin, and antibiotics decreased the incidence of spontaneous preterm birth and prolonged the period from diagnosis to delivery by an average of 5.6 weeks, compared with no cerclage.
“We’ve already incorporated this cerclage into our practice and have been able to offer this to pregnant mothers with twins with great success,” senior author Vincenzo Berghella, MD, said in a news release.
“These results have the potential to change practice and help many more women have healthy twin babies,” said Dr. Berghella, director of the division of maternal fetal medicine at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
A shift in perspective
More research is needed to establish a standardized approach, but the trial should “open physicians’ perspectives to think about how, in selected cases and with the proper approach, cerclage can work well,” said Ozhan M. Turan, MD, PhD, director of the division of maternal and fetal medicine and director of fetal therapy and complex obstetric surgery at University of Maryland in Baltimore.
Although many physicians use cerclage for twin pregnancies in select situations, the practice is not well established. “If you look at the guidelines or books, mostly everyone thinks that doing a cerclage in twins is not a good idea,” Dr. Turan said in an interview.
In the present trial, the researchers controlled for many factors and carefully selected patients with no signs of preterm labor or infection. It is not simply a matter of saying, “Do the stitch,” he said. “But it is proven: if you select patients well and use the appropriate approach, then you could improve the outcome.”
The study is the first randomized controlled trial of physical exam–indicated cerclage focused on twins, according to its authors. It enrolled patients between July 2015 and July 2019. In the end, the researchers analyzed data from 30 pregnancies, rather than the originally intended 52. They stopped the trial after a data and safety monitoring board considered it “unethical to continue the study due to the considerable perinatal mortality in one of the arms ... and requested to unmask the arms of the study,” the researchers said.
Perinatal mortality occurred in 18% of neonates in the cerclage group (6 of 34), compared with 77% in the group without cerclage (20 of 26). All perinatal mortality cases were associated with delivery before 24 weeks.
“The small number of participants reflects how rare this condition is among all pregnancies,” first author Amanda Roman, MD, of the division of maternal fetal medicine at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, said in the news release. “But because women were randomized to treatment and nontreatment groups, the results are strong, as confirmed by the independent data and safety monitoring board.”
The researchers enrolled women with twin pregnancies and asymptomatic cervical dilation from 1 to 4 cm before 24 weeks. Exclusion criteria included monochorionic-monoamniotic pregnancy, selective fetal growth restriction, twin-twin transfusion syndrome, major fetal malformation, known genetic anomaly, placenta previa, signs of labor, or clinical chorioamnionitis.
In all, 17 women were randomized to cerclage and 13 to the no-cerclage group. Both groups had similar patient characteristics. About 93% of the twin gestations were diamniotic-dichorionic. Assisted reproductive technology was used by about 36% of the participants, and 20% had a history of singleton preterm birth. Four women assigned to cerclage did not undergo the procedure but were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Two of the four patients had contraindications that occurred soon after randomization (rupture of amniotic membranes and vaginal bleeding), one had a friable cervix, and one declined cerclage after being randomized.
Spontaneous preterm birth before 34 weeks of gestation, the primary outcome, occurred in 12 of 17 women in the cerclage group and in all 13 women in the no-cerclage group (70% vs. 100%).
Trial to assess ultrasound indicated cerclage
“Expectant management with no cerclage is the current standard of care for these women,” Dr. Roman and coauthors wrote. “Despite small sample size, we were able to show a significant benefit to physical exam–indicated cerclage.”
Inability to place the cerclage in one patient due to friable cervix was the only intraoperative complication. “Larger cohorts in singleton pregnancies have informed a 10%-20% risk of intraoperative rupture of the membranes, cervical laceration, and bleeding during the procedure,” the researchers noted.
All women who received cerclage also received indomethacin and antibiotics, although these elements of management were not prespecified. Given the relatively small sample size, it is unclear what role factors such as indomethacin, which was administered to 82% of the cerclage group versus 31% of the no-cerclage group, and antibiotics may have played, said Dr. Turan.
Prospective studies may help clarify how the degree of cervical dilation, gestational age, use of progesterone, or surgical techniques may influence outcomes. In addition, the researchers are enrolling patients in another trial. That study aims to assess whether cerclage reduces the incidence of spontaneous preterm birth in asymptomatic women with twin gestations and cervical length of 15 mm or less diagnosed by transvaginal ultrasound between 16 and 24 weeks of gestation.
The study had no external financial support. The authors had no conflicts of interest. Dr. Turan said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Roman A et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jun. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.047.
FROM THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
One-week postsurgical interval for voiding trial increases pass rate
Women who underwent vaginal prolapse surgery and did not immediately have a successful voiding trial were seven times more likely to pass their second voiding trial if their follow-up was 7 days after surgery instead of 4 days, according to a study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
“This information is useful for setting expectations and for counseling patients on when it might be best to repeat a voiding trial in those with transient incomplete bladder emptying on the day of surgery, especially for those who may not live close to their surgeon, or for those who have difficulty traveling to the office,” said Jeffrey S. Schachar, MD, of Wake Forest Baptist Health in Winston-Salem, N.C., and colleagues. “Despite a higher rate of initial unsuccessful office voiding trials, however, the early group did have significantly fewer days with an indwelling transurethral catheter, as well as total catheterization days,” including self-catheterization.
The researchers note that rates of temporary use of catheters after surgery vary widely, from 12% to 83%, likely because no consensus exists on how long to wait for voiding trials and what constitutes a successful trial.
“It is critical to identify patients with incomplete bladder emptying in order to prevent pain, myogenic and neurogenic damage, ureteral reflux and bladder overdistension that may further impair voiding function,” the authors wrote. “However, extending bladder drainage beyond the necessary recovery period may be associated with higher rates of urinary tract infection (UTI) and patient bother.”
To learn more about the best duration for postoperative catheter use, the researchers enrolled 102 patients before they underwent vaginal prolapse surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Health and Cleveland Clinic Florida from February 2017 to November 2019. The 29 patients with a successful voiding trial within 6 hours after surgery left the study, and 5 others were excluded for needing longer vaginal packing.
The voiding trial involved helping the patient stand to drain the bladder via the catheter, backfilling the bladder with 300 mL of saline solution through the catheter, removing the catheter to give women 1 hour to urinate, and then measuring the postvoid residual with a catheter or ultrasound. At least 100 mL postvoid residual was considered persistent incomplete bladder emptying.
The 60 remaining patients who did not pass the initial voiding trial and opted to remain in the study received a transurethral indwelling catheter and were randomly assigned to return for a second voiding trial either 2-4 days after surgery (depending on day of the week) or 7 days after surgery. The groups were demographically and clinically similar, with predominantly white postmenopausal, non-smoking women with stage II or III multicompartment pelvic organ prolapse.
Women without successful trials could continue with the transurethral catheter or give themselves intermittent catheterizations with a follow-up schedule determined by their surgeon. The researchers then tracked the women for 6 weeks to determine the rate of unsuccessful repeat voiding trials.
Among the women who returned 2-4 days post surgery, 23% had unsuccessful follow-up voiding trials, compared with 3% in the group returning 7 days after surgery (relative risk = 7; P = .02). The researchers calculated that one case of persistent postoperative incomplete bladder emptying was prevented for every five patients who used a catheter for 7 days after surgery.
Kevin A. Ault, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, said the study was well done, although the findings were unsurprising. He said the clinical implication is straightforward – to wait a week before doing a second voiding trial.
“I suspect these findings match the clinical experience of many surgeons. It is always good to see a well-done clinical trial on a topic,” Dr Ault said in an interview. “The most notable finding is how this impacts patient counseling. Gynecologists should tell their patients that it will take a week with a catheter when this problem arises.”
“The main limitation is whether this finding can be extrapolated to other gynecological surgeries, such as hysterectomy,” said Dr. Ault, who was not involved in the study. “Urinary retention is likely less common after that surgery, but it is still bothersome to patients.”
Dr. Schachar and associates also reported that patients in the earlier group “used significantly more morphine dose equivalents within 24 hours of the office voiding trial than the late-voiding trial group, which was expected given the proximity to surgery” (3 vs. 0.38; P = .005). However, new postoperative pain medication prescriptions and refills were similar in both groups.
Secondary endpoints included UTI rates, total days with a catheter, and patient experience of discomfort with the catheter. The two groups of women reported similar levels of catheter bother, but there was a nonsignificant difference in UTI rates: 23% in the earlier group, compared with 7% in the later group (P = .07).
The early-voiding trial group had an average 5 days with an indwelling transurethral catheter, compared with a significantly different 7 days in the later group (P = .0007). The early group also had fewer total days with an indwelling transurethral catheter and self-catheterization (6 days), compared with the late group (7 days; P = .0013). No patients had persistent incomplete bladder emptying after 17 days post surgery.
“Being able to adequately predict which patients are more likely to have unsuccessful postoperative voiding trials allows surgeons to better counsel their patients and may guide clinical decisions,” Dr. Schachar and associates said. They acknowledged, however, that their study’s biggest weakness is the small enrollment, which led to larger confidence intervals related to relative risk differences between the groups.
The study did not use external funding. Four of the investigators received grant, research funding, or honoraria from one or many medical device or pharmaceutical companies. The remaining researchers had no disclosures. Dr. Ault said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Schachar JS et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jun. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.001.
Women who underwent vaginal prolapse surgery and did not immediately have a successful voiding trial were seven times more likely to pass their second voiding trial if their follow-up was 7 days after surgery instead of 4 days, according to a study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
“This information is useful for setting expectations and for counseling patients on when it might be best to repeat a voiding trial in those with transient incomplete bladder emptying on the day of surgery, especially for those who may not live close to their surgeon, or for those who have difficulty traveling to the office,” said Jeffrey S. Schachar, MD, of Wake Forest Baptist Health in Winston-Salem, N.C., and colleagues. “Despite a higher rate of initial unsuccessful office voiding trials, however, the early group did have significantly fewer days with an indwelling transurethral catheter, as well as total catheterization days,” including self-catheterization.
The researchers note that rates of temporary use of catheters after surgery vary widely, from 12% to 83%, likely because no consensus exists on how long to wait for voiding trials and what constitutes a successful trial.
“It is critical to identify patients with incomplete bladder emptying in order to prevent pain, myogenic and neurogenic damage, ureteral reflux and bladder overdistension that may further impair voiding function,” the authors wrote. “However, extending bladder drainage beyond the necessary recovery period may be associated with higher rates of urinary tract infection (UTI) and patient bother.”
To learn more about the best duration for postoperative catheter use, the researchers enrolled 102 patients before they underwent vaginal prolapse surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Health and Cleveland Clinic Florida from February 2017 to November 2019. The 29 patients with a successful voiding trial within 6 hours after surgery left the study, and 5 others were excluded for needing longer vaginal packing.
The voiding trial involved helping the patient stand to drain the bladder via the catheter, backfilling the bladder with 300 mL of saline solution through the catheter, removing the catheter to give women 1 hour to urinate, and then measuring the postvoid residual with a catheter or ultrasound. At least 100 mL postvoid residual was considered persistent incomplete bladder emptying.
The 60 remaining patients who did not pass the initial voiding trial and opted to remain in the study received a transurethral indwelling catheter and were randomly assigned to return for a second voiding trial either 2-4 days after surgery (depending on day of the week) or 7 days after surgery. The groups were demographically and clinically similar, with predominantly white postmenopausal, non-smoking women with stage II or III multicompartment pelvic organ prolapse.
Women without successful trials could continue with the transurethral catheter or give themselves intermittent catheterizations with a follow-up schedule determined by their surgeon. The researchers then tracked the women for 6 weeks to determine the rate of unsuccessful repeat voiding trials.
Among the women who returned 2-4 days post surgery, 23% had unsuccessful follow-up voiding trials, compared with 3% in the group returning 7 days after surgery (relative risk = 7; P = .02). The researchers calculated that one case of persistent postoperative incomplete bladder emptying was prevented for every five patients who used a catheter for 7 days after surgery.
Kevin A. Ault, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, said the study was well done, although the findings were unsurprising. He said the clinical implication is straightforward – to wait a week before doing a second voiding trial.
“I suspect these findings match the clinical experience of many surgeons. It is always good to see a well-done clinical trial on a topic,” Dr Ault said in an interview. “The most notable finding is how this impacts patient counseling. Gynecologists should tell their patients that it will take a week with a catheter when this problem arises.”
“The main limitation is whether this finding can be extrapolated to other gynecological surgeries, such as hysterectomy,” said Dr. Ault, who was not involved in the study. “Urinary retention is likely less common after that surgery, but it is still bothersome to patients.”
Dr. Schachar and associates also reported that patients in the earlier group “used significantly more morphine dose equivalents within 24 hours of the office voiding trial than the late-voiding trial group, which was expected given the proximity to surgery” (3 vs. 0.38; P = .005). However, new postoperative pain medication prescriptions and refills were similar in both groups.
Secondary endpoints included UTI rates, total days with a catheter, and patient experience of discomfort with the catheter. The two groups of women reported similar levels of catheter bother, but there was a nonsignificant difference in UTI rates: 23% in the earlier group, compared with 7% in the later group (P = .07).
The early-voiding trial group had an average 5 days with an indwelling transurethral catheter, compared with a significantly different 7 days in the later group (P = .0007). The early group also had fewer total days with an indwelling transurethral catheter and self-catheterization (6 days), compared with the late group (7 days; P = .0013). No patients had persistent incomplete bladder emptying after 17 days post surgery.
“Being able to adequately predict which patients are more likely to have unsuccessful postoperative voiding trials allows surgeons to better counsel their patients and may guide clinical decisions,” Dr. Schachar and associates said. They acknowledged, however, that their study’s biggest weakness is the small enrollment, which led to larger confidence intervals related to relative risk differences between the groups.
The study did not use external funding. Four of the investigators received grant, research funding, or honoraria from one or many medical device or pharmaceutical companies. The remaining researchers had no disclosures. Dr. Ault said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Schachar JS et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jun. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.001.
Women who underwent vaginal prolapse surgery and did not immediately have a successful voiding trial were seven times more likely to pass their second voiding trial if their follow-up was 7 days after surgery instead of 4 days, according to a study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
“This information is useful for setting expectations and for counseling patients on when it might be best to repeat a voiding trial in those with transient incomplete bladder emptying on the day of surgery, especially for those who may not live close to their surgeon, or for those who have difficulty traveling to the office,” said Jeffrey S. Schachar, MD, of Wake Forest Baptist Health in Winston-Salem, N.C., and colleagues. “Despite a higher rate of initial unsuccessful office voiding trials, however, the early group did have significantly fewer days with an indwelling transurethral catheter, as well as total catheterization days,” including self-catheterization.
The researchers note that rates of temporary use of catheters after surgery vary widely, from 12% to 83%, likely because no consensus exists on how long to wait for voiding trials and what constitutes a successful trial.
“It is critical to identify patients with incomplete bladder emptying in order to prevent pain, myogenic and neurogenic damage, ureteral reflux and bladder overdistension that may further impair voiding function,” the authors wrote. “However, extending bladder drainage beyond the necessary recovery period may be associated with higher rates of urinary tract infection (UTI) and patient bother.”
To learn more about the best duration for postoperative catheter use, the researchers enrolled 102 patients before they underwent vaginal prolapse surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Health and Cleveland Clinic Florida from February 2017 to November 2019. The 29 patients with a successful voiding trial within 6 hours after surgery left the study, and 5 others were excluded for needing longer vaginal packing.
The voiding trial involved helping the patient stand to drain the bladder via the catheter, backfilling the bladder with 300 mL of saline solution through the catheter, removing the catheter to give women 1 hour to urinate, and then measuring the postvoid residual with a catheter or ultrasound. At least 100 mL postvoid residual was considered persistent incomplete bladder emptying.
The 60 remaining patients who did not pass the initial voiding trial and opted to remain in the study received a transurethral indwelling catheter and were randomly assigned to return for a second voiding trial either 2-4 days after surgery (depending on day of the week) or 7 days after surgery. The groups were demographically and clinically similar, with predominantly white postmenopausal, non-smoking women with stage II or III multicompartment pelvic organ prolapse.
Women without successful trials could continue with the transurethral catheter or give themselves intermittent catheterizations with a follow-up schedule determined by their surgeon. The researchers then tracked the women for 6 weeks to determine the rate of unsuccessful repeat voiding trials.
Among the women who returned 2-4 days post surgery, 23% had unsuccessful follow-up voiding trials, compared with 3% in the group returning 7 days after surgery (relative risk = 7; P = .02). The researchers calculated that one case of persistent postoperative incomplete bladder emptying was prevented for every five patients who used a catheter for 7 days after surgery.
Kevin A. Ault, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, said the study was well done, although the findings were unsurprising. He said the clinical implication is straightforward – to wait a week before doing a second voiding trial.
“I suspect these findings match the clinical experience of many surgeons. It is always good to see a well-done clinical trial on a topic,” Dr Ault said in an interview. “The most notable finding is how this impacts patient counseling. Gynecologists should tell their patients that it will take a week with a catheter when this problem arises.”
“The main limitation is whether this finding can be extrapolated to other gynecological surgeries, such as hysterectomy,” said Dr. Ault, who was not involved in the study. “Urinary retention is likely less common after that surgery, but it is still bothersome to patients.”
Dr. Schachar and associates also reported that patients in the earlier group “used significantly more morphine dose equivalents within 24 hours of the office voiding trial than the late-voiding trial group, which was expected given the proximity to surgery” (3 vs. 0.38; P = .005). However, new postoperative pain medication prescriptions and refills were similar in both groups.
Secondary endpoints included UTI rates, total days with a catheter, and patient experience of discomfort with the catheter. The two groups of women reported similar levels of catheter bother, but there was a nonsignificant difference in UTI rates: 23% in the earlier group, compared with 7% in the later group (P = .07).
The early-voiding trial group had an average 5 days with an indwelling transurethral catheter, compared with a significantly different 7 days in the later group (P = .0007). The early group also had fewer total days with an indwelling transurethral catheter and self-catheterization (6 days), compared with the late group (7 days; P = .0013). No patients had persistent incomplete bladder emptying after 17 days post surgery.
“Being able to adequately predict which patients are more likely to have unsuccessful postoperative voiding trials allows surgeons to better counsel their patients and may guide clinical decisions,” Dr. Schachar and associates said. They acknowledged, however, that their study’s biggest weakness is the small enrollment, which led to larger confidence intervals related to relative risk differences between the groups.
The study did not use external funding. Four of the investigators received grant, research funding, or honoraria from one or many medical device or pharmaceutical companies. The remaining researchers had no disclosures. Dr. Ault said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Schachar JS et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jun. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.001.
FROM AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Pubovaginal sling during urethral diverticulectomy reduces stress incontinence
a large retrospective cohort study has found.
However, in 66% of cases in which the diverticulectomy alone was performed, women also saw their stress urinary incontinence (SUI) resolve.
For a study published online in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Sarah E. Bradley, MD, of Georgetown University in Washington and colleagues analyzed records for 485 urethral diverticulectomies performed at 11 institutions over a 16-year period. One-fifth of patients had an autologous fascial pubovaginal sling (PVS) placed at the time of surgery.
The concomitant sling was associated with a significantly greater reduction of SUI after adjustment for prior diverticulectomy, prior incontinence surgery, age, race, and parity (adjusted odds ratio, 2.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.02-5.03; P = .043).
However, 10% of women in the sling-treated group had recurrent UTI from 6 weeks after surgery, compared with 3% of those in the diverticulectomy-only group (P = .001). Even after adjustment for higher rates of UTI before surgery in the sling group, the odds of recurrent UTI still were higher with the concomitant sling. Women within the sling group also were more likely to experience urinary retention at more than 6 weeks after surgery (8% vs. 1%; P equal to .0001).
Dr. Bradley and her colleagues noted that theirs was the largest study to date evaluating postoperative SUI in patients undergoing diverticulectomy with and without a PVS, noting that many surgeons do not routinely offer the sling at the time of diverticulectomy.
They also acknowledged a selection bias in their study. “With the previously thought theoretical increased risk of the addition of PVS, it is likely that most providers would prefer only to offer this concomitant procedure to those with significantly bothersome SUI. Additionally, the majority of women that underwent PVS (83%) came from two of the 11 participating institutions,” the researchers wrote.
In an interview, Catherine A. Mathews, MD, of Wake Forest University in Winston Salem, N.C., argued for a different interpretation of the study’s results.
“The study was beautifully done and it’s an ideal subject for a review, but in some respect the authors missed the opportunity to highlight that there was a spontaneous resolution of stress incontinence symptoms in 66% of women who received diverticulectomy alone,” Dr. Matthews said, adding that this has important implications for medical decision-making and patient choice.
“Morbidity associated with the pubovaginal sling was very low in this study, probably because it was being done by very proficient surgeons, but in many centers it is higher,” Dr. Matthews said. Even with the overall low morbidity seen in the study, “there was still a significant price to pay” for some women in the pubovaginal sling–treated group. “Recurrent UTI can be challenging to manage in the long term, with antibiotic morbidity and significant symptom bother. For the patients with urinary retention, having to manage it with a catheter is a really awful.”
Dr. Matthews said that the study made a case for interval, rather than concomitant, sling placement in women undergoing urethral diverticulectomy. “If you have a patient who insists on addressing symptoms concomitantly, this study provides good information about the long-term likelihood of two complications: urinary retention and recurrent UTI,” she said. “The vast majority of patients that I’m counseling would choose not to have the sling because of these complications.” And while avoiding reoperation may seem a good reason to opt for the PVS during diverticulectomy, the sling was not associated with a decrease in reoperations, compared with diverticulectomy alone, she noted.
“As we can see in the study, diverticulectomy itself has a high impact on stress incontinence,” Dr. Matthews continued. “If you restore the urethral anatomy and wait for the urethra to heal, you have a very good chance that the incontinence resolves.” For those women who do not see resolution and whose symptoms are still severe enough to bother them, “you’d have the flexibility postoperatively to offer not only a pubovaginal sling, but a synthetic mesh sling or a urethral bulking procedure.”
Dr. Bradley and her colleagues reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Matthews disclosed financial support from Boston Scientific and serving as an expert witness for Johnson & Johnson.
SOURCE: Bradley SE et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.002.
a large retrospective cohort study has found.
However, in 66% of cases in which the diverticulectomy alone was performed, women also saw their stress urinary incontinence (SUI) resolve.
For a study published online in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Sarah E. Bradley, MD, of Georgetown University in Washington and colleagues analyzed records for 485 urethral diverticulectomies performed at 11 institutions over a 16-year period. One-fifth of patients had an autologous fascial pubovaginal sling (PVS) placed at the time of surgery.
The concomitant sling was associated with a significantly greater reduction of SUI after adjustment for prior diverticulectomy, prior incontinence surgery, age, race, and parity (adjusted odds ratio, 2.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.02-5.03; P = .043).
However, 10% of women in the sling-treated group had recurrent UTI from 6 weeks after surgery, compared with 3% of those in the diverticulectomy-only group (P = .001). Even after adjustment for higher rates of UTI before surgery in the sling group, the odds of recurrent UTI still were higher with the concomitant sling. Women within the sling group also were more likely to experience urinary retention at more than 6 weeks after surgery (8% vs. 1%; P equal to .0001).
Dr. Bradley and her colleagues noted that theirs was the largest study to date evaluating postoperative SUI in patients undergoing diverticulectomy with and without a PVS, noting that many surgeons do not routinely offer the sling at the time of diverticulectomy.
They also acknowledged a selection bias in their study. “With the previously thought theoretical increased risk of the addition of PVS, it is likely that most providers would prefer only to offer this concomitant procedure to those with significantly bothersome SUI. Additionally, the majority of women that underwent PVS (83%) came from two of the 11 participating institutions,” the researchers wrote.
In an interview, Catherine A. Mathews, MD, of Wake Forest University in Winston Salem, N.C., argued for a different interpretation of the study’s results.
“The study was beautifully done and it’s an ideal subject for a review, but in some respect the authors missed the opportunity to highlight that there was a spontaneous resolution of stress incontinence symptoms in 66% of women who received diverticulectomy alone,” Dr. Matthews said, adding that this has important implications for medical decision-making and patient choice.
“Morbidity associated with the pubovaginal sling was very low in this study, probably because it was being done by very proficient surgeons, but in many centers it is higher,” Dr. Matthews said. Even with the overall low morbidity seen in the study, “there was still a significant price to pay” for some women in the pubovaginal sling–treated group. “Recurrent UTI can be challenging to manage in the long term, with antibiotic morbidity and significant symptom bother. For the patients with urinary retention, having to manage it with a catheter is a really awful.”
Dr. Matthews said that the study made a case for interval, rather than concomitant, sling placement in women undergoing urethral diverticulectomy. “If you have a patient who insists on addressing symptoms concomitantly, this study provides good information about the long-term likelihood of two complications: urinary retention and recurrent UTI,” she said. “The vast majority of patients that I’m counseling would choose not to have the sling because of these complications.” And while avoiding reoperation may seem a good reason to opt for the PVS during diverticulectomy, the sling was not associated with a decrease in reoperations, compared with diverticulectomy alone, she noted.
“As we can see in the study, diverticulectomy itself has a high impact on stress incontinence,” Dr. Matthews continued. “If you restore the urethral anatomy and wait for the urethra to heal, you have a very good chance that the incontinence resolves.” For those women who do not see resolution and whose symptoms are still severe enough to bother them, “you’d have the flexibility postoperatively to offer not only a pubovaginal sling, but a synthetic mesh sling or a urethral bulking procedure.”
Dr. Bradley and her colleagues reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Matthews disclosed financial support from Boston Scientific and serving as an expert witness for Johnson & Johnson.
SOURCE: Bradley SE et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.002.
a large retrospective cohort study has found.
However, in 66% of cases in which the diverticulectomy alone was performed, women also saw their stress urinary incontinence (SUI) resolve.
For a study published online in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Sarah E. Bradley, MD, of Georgetown University in Washington and colleagues analyzed records for 485 urethral diverticulectomies performed at 11 institutions over a 16-year period. One-fifth of patients had an autologous fascial pubovaginal sling (PVS) placed at the time of surgery.
The concomitant sling was associated with a significantly greater reduction of SUI after adjustment for prior diverticulectomy, prior incontinence surgery, age, race, and parity (adjusted odds ratio, 2.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.02-5.03; P = .043).
However, 10% of women in the sling-treated group had recurrent UTI from 6 weeks after surgery, compared with 3% of those in the diverticulectomy-only group (P = .001). Even after adjustment for higher rates of UTI before surgery in the sling group, the odds of recurrent UTI still were higher with the concomitant sling. Women within the sling group also were more likely to experience urinary retention at more than 6 weeks after surgery (8% vs. 1%; P equal to .0001).
Dr. Bradley and her colleagues noted that theirs was the largest study to date evaluating postoperative SUI in patients undergoing diverticulectomy with and without a PVS, noting that many surgeons do not routinely offer the sling at the time of diverticulectomy.
They also acknowledged a selection bias in their study. “With the previously thought theoretical increased risk of the addition of PVS, it is likely that most providers would prefer only to offer this concomitant procedure to those with significantly bothersome SUI. Additionally, the majority of women that underwent PVS (83%) came from two of the 11 participating institutions,” the researchers wrote.
In an interview, Catherine A. Mathews, MD, of Wake Forest University in Winston Salem, N.C., argued for a different interpretation of the study’s results.
“The study was beautifully done and it’s an ideal subject for a review, but in some respect the authors missed the opportunity to highlight that there was a spontaneous resolution of stress incontinence symptoms in 66% of women who received diverticulectomy alone,” Dr. Matthews said, adding that this has important implications for medical decision-making and patient choice.
“Morbidity associated with the pubovaginal sling was very low in this study, probably because it was being done by very proficient surgeons, but in many centers it is higher,” Dr. Matthews said. Even with the overall low morbidity seen in the study, “there was still a significant price to pay” for some women in the pubovaginal sling–treated group. “Recurrent UTI can be challenging to manage in the long term, with antibiotic morbidity and significant symptom bother. For the patients with urinary retention, having to manage it with a catheter is a really awful.”
Dr. Matthews said that the study made a case for interval, rather than concomitant, sling placement in women undergoing urethral diverticulectomy. “If you have a patient who insists on addressing symptoms concomitantly, this study provides good information about the long-term likelihood of two complications: urinary retention and recurrent UTI,” she said. “The vast majority of patients that I’m counseling would choose not to have the sling because of these complications.” And while avoiding reoperation may seem a good reason to opt for the PVS during diverticulectomy, the sling was not associated with a decrease in reoperations, compared with diverticulectomy alone, she noted.
“As we can see in the study, diverticulectomy itself has a high impact on stress incontinence,” Dr. Matthews continued. “If you restore the urethral anatomy and wait for the urethra to heal, you have a very good chance that the incontinence resolves.” For those women who do not see resolution and whose symptoms are still severe enough to bother them, “you’d have the flexibility postoperatively to offer not only a pubovaginal sling, but a synthetic mesh sling or a urethral bulking procedure.”
Dr. Bradley and her colleagues reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Matthews disclosed financial support from Boston Scientific and serving as an expert witness for Johnson & Johnson.
SOURCE: Bradley SE et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2020.06.002.
FROM AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
High BMI does not complicate postpartum tubal ligation
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS – Higher body mass index is not associated with increased morbidity in women undergoing postpartum tubal ligation, according to a study of more than 1,000 patients.
John J. Byrne, MD, said at the Pregnancy Meeting. Dr. Byrne is affiliated with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
Physicians may recommend contraception within 6 weeks of delivery, but many patients do not attend postpartum visits. “One option for women who have completed childbearing is bilateral midsegment salpingectomy via minilaparotomy,” Dr. Byrne said at the Pregnancy Meeting, sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. “Offering this procedure immediately after delivery makes it available to women who face obstacles to follow-up care.”
The procedure entails the risk of anesthetic complications, bowel injury, and vascular injury. Subsequent pregnancy or ectopic pregnancy also may occur. Some centers will not perform the procedure if a patient’s size affects the surgeon’s ability to feel the relevant anatomy, Dr. Byrne said. “Although operative complications are presumed to be higher among obese women,” prior studies have not examined whether BMI affects rates of procedure completion, complication, or subsequent pregnancy, the researchers said.
To study this question, Dr. Byrne and colleagues examined data from women who requested postpartum sterilization following vaginal delivery at their center in 2018. The center uses the Parkland tubal ligation technique. The researchers assessed complication rates using a composite measure that included surgical complications (that is, blood transfusion, aborted procedure, or extension of incision), anesthetic complications, readmission, superficial or deep wound infection, venous thromboembolism, ileus or small bowel obstruction, incomplete transection, and subsequent pregnancy. The investigators used statistical tests to assess the relationship between BMI and morbidity.
In all, 1,014 patients underwent a postpartum tubal ligation; 17% had undergone prior abdominal surgery. The researchers classified patients’ BMI as normal (7% of the population), overweight (28%), class I obesity (38%), class II obesity (18%), or class III obesity (9%). A composite morbidity event occurred in 2%, and the proportion of patients with a complication did not significantly differ across BMI categories. No morbid events occurred in patients with normal BMI, which indicates “minimal risk” in this population, Dr. Byrne said. One incomplete transection occurred in a patient with class I obesity, and one subsequent pregnancy occurred in a patient with class II obesity. Estimated blood loss ranged from 9 mL in patients with normal BMI to 13 mL in patients with class III obesity, and length of surgery ranged from 32 minutes to 40 minutes. Neither difference is clinically significant, Dr. Byrne said.
“For the woman who desires permanent contraception, BMI should not impede her access to the procedure,” he noted.
The researchers had no relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: Byrne JJ et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jan;222(1):S290, Abstract 442.
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS – Higher body mass index is not associated with increased morbidity in women undergoing postpartum tubal ligation, according to a study of more than 1,000 patients.
John J. Byrne, MD, said at the Pregnancy Meeting. Dr. Byrne is affiliated with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
Physicians may recommend contraception within 6 weeks of delivery, but many patients do not attend postpartum visits. “One option for women who have completed childbearing is bilateral midsegment salpingectomy via minilaparotomy,” Dr. Byrne said at the Pregnancy Meeting, sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. “Offering this procedure immediately after delivery makes it available to women who face obstacles to follow-up care.”
The procedure entails the risk of anesthetic complications, bowel injury, and vascular injury. Subsequent pregnancy or ectopic pregnancy also may occur. Some centers will not perform the procedure if a patient’s size affects the surgeon’s ability to feel the relevant anatomy, Dr. Byrne said. “Although operative complications are presumed to be higher among obese women,” prior studies have not examined whether BMI affects rates of procedure completion, complication, or subsequent pregnancy, the researchers said.
To study this question, Dr. Byrne and colleagues examined data from women who requested postpartum sterilization following vaginal delivery at their center in 2018. The center uses the Parkland tubal ligation technique. The researchers assessed complication rates using a composite measure that included surgical complications (that is, blood transfusion, aborted procedure, or extension of incision), anesthetic complications, readmission, superficial or deep wound infection, venous thromboembolism, ileus or small bowel obstruction, incomplete transection, and subsequent pregnancy. The investigators used statistical tests to assess the relationship between BMI and morbidity.
In all, 1,014 patients underwent a postpartum tubal ligation; 17% had undergone prior abdominal surgery. The researchers classified patients’ BMI as normal (7% of the population), overweight (28%), class I obesity (38%), class II obesity (18%), or class III obesity (9%). A composite morbidity event occurred in 2%, and the proportion of patients with a complication did not significantly differ across BMI categories. No morbid events occurred in patients with normal BMI, which indicates “minimal risk” in this population, Dr. Byrne said. One incomplete transection occurred in a patient with class I obesity, and one subsequent pregnancy occurred in a patient with class II obesity. Estimated blood loss ranged from 9 mL in patients with normal BMI to 13 mL in patients with class III obesity, and length of surgery ranged from 32 minutes to 40 minutes. Neither difference is clinically significant, Dr. Byrne said.
“For the woman who desires permanent contraception, BMI should not impede her access to the procedure,” he noted.
The researchers had no relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: Byrne JJ et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jan;222(1):S290, Abstract 442.
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS – Higher body mass index is not associated with increased morbidity in women undergoing postpartum tubal ligation, according to a study of more than 1,000 patients.
John J. Byrne, MD, said at the Pregnancy Meeting. Dr. Byrne is affiliated with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
Physicians may recommend contraception within 6 weeks of delivery, but many patients do not attend postpartum visits. “One option for women who have completed childbearing is bilateral midsegment salpingectomy via minilaparotomy,” Dr. Byrne said at the Pregnancy Meeting, sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. “Offering this procedure immediately after delivery makes it available to women who face obstacles to follow-up care.”
The procedure entails the risk of anesthetic complications, bowel injury, and vascular injury. Subsequent pregnancy or ectopic pregnancy also may occur. Some centers will not perform the procedure if a patient’s size affects the surgeon’s ability to feel the relevant anatomy, Dr. Byrne said. “Although operative complications are presumed to be higher among obese women,” prior studies have not examined whether BMI affects rates of procedure completion, complication, or subsequent pregnancy, the researchers said.
To study this question, Dr. Byrne and colleagues examined data from women who requested postpartum sterilization following vaginal delivery at their center in 2018. The center uses the Parkland tubal ligation technique. The researchers assessed complication rates using a composite measure that included surgical complications (that is, blood transfusion, aborted procedure, or extension of incision), anesthetic complications, readmission, superficial or deep wound infection, venous thromboembolism, ileus or small bowel obstruction, incomplete transection, and subsequent pregnancy. The investigators used statistical tests to assess the relationship between BMI and morbidity.
In all, 1,014 patients underwent a postpartum tubal ligation; 17% had undergone prior abdominal surgery. The researchers classified patients’ BMI as normal (7% of the population), overweight (28%), class I obesity (38%), class II obesity (18%), or class III obesity (9%). A composite morbidity event occurred in 2%, and the proportion of patients with a complication did not significantly differ across BMI categories. No morbid events occurred in patients with normal BMI, which indicates “minimal risk” in this population, Dr. Byrne said. One incomplete transection occurred in a patient with class I obesity, and one subsequent pregnancy occurred in a patient with class II obesity. Estimated blood loss ranged from 9 mL in patients with normal BMI to 13 mL in patients with class III obesity, and length of surgery ranged from 32 minutes to 40 minutes. Neither difference is clinically significant, Dr. Byrne said.
“For the woman who desires permanent contraception, BMI should not impede her access to the procedure,” he noted.
The researchers had no relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: Byrne JJ et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jan;222(1):S290, Abstract 442.
REPORTING FROM THE PREGNANCY MEETING
ERAS protocol for cesarean delivery reduces opioid usage
GRAPEVINE, TEX. – An enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) pathway for cesarean delivery decreased postoperative opioid usage by 62% in one health care organization, researchers reported at the Pregnancy Meeting. The protocol incorporates a stepwise approach to pain control with no scheduled postoperative opioids.
Abington Jefferson Health, which includes two hospitals in Pennsylvania, implemented an ERAS pathway for all cesarean deliveries in October 2018. Kathryn Ruymann, MD, said at the meeting sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. Dr. Ruymann is an obstetrics and gynecology resident at Abington Jefferson Health.
Prior to the ERAS protocol, 99%-100% of patients took an opioid during the postoperative period. “With ERAS, 26% of patients never took an opioid during the postop period,” Dr. Ruymann and her associates reported. “Pain scores decreased with ERAS for postoperative days 1-3 and remained unchanged on day 4.”
One in 300 opioid-naive patients who receives opioids after cesarean delivery becomes a persistent user, one study has shown (Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Sep; 215(3):353.e1-18). “ERAS pathways integrate evidence-based interventions before, during, and after surgery to optimize outcomes, specifically to decrease postoperative opioid use,” the researchers said.
While other surgical fields have adopted ERAS pathways, more research is needed in obstetrics, said Dr. Ruymann. More than 4,500 women deliver at Abington Jefferson Health each year, and about a third undergo cesarean deliveries.
The organization’s ERAS pathway incorporates preoperative education, fasting guidelines, and intraoperative analgesia, nausea prophylaxis, and antimicrobial therapy. Under the new protocol, postoperative analgesia includes scheduled administration of nonopioid medications, including celecoxib and acetaminophen. In addition, patients may take 5-10 mg of oxycodone orally every 4 hours as needed, and hydromorphone 0.4 mg IV as needed may be used for refractory pain. In addition, patients should resume eating as soon as tolerated and be out of bed within 4 hours after surgery, according to the protocol. Postoperative management of pruritus and instructions on how to wean off opioids at home are among the other elements of the enhanced recovery plan.
To examine postoperative opioid usage before and after implementation of the ERAS pathway, the investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study of 316 women who underwent cesarean delivery 3 months before the start of the ERAS pathway and 267 who underwent cesarean delivery 3 months after. The researchers used an application developed in Qlik Sense, a data analytics platform, to calculate opioid usage.
Mean postoperative opioid use decreased by 62%. The reduction in opioid use remained 8 months after starting the ERAS pathway.
“An ERAS pathway for [cesarean delivery] decreases postoperative opioid usage by integrating a multimodal stepwise approach to pain control and recovery,” the researchers said. “Standardized order sets and departmentwide education were crucial in the success of ERAS. Additional research is needed to evaluate the impact of unique components of ERAS in order to optimize this pathway.”
The researchers had no disclosures.
SOURCE: Ruymann K et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jan;222(1):S212, Abstract 315.
GRAPEVINE, TEX. – An enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) pathway for cesarean delivery decreased postoperative opioid usage by 62% in one health care organization, researchers reported at the Pregnancy Meeting. The protocol incorporates a stepwise approach to pain control with no scheduled postoperative opioids.
Abington Jefferson Health, which includes two hospitals in Pennsylvania, implemented an ERAS pathway for all cesarean deliveries in October 2018. Kathryn Ruymann, MD, said at the meeting sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. Dr. Ruymann is an obstetrics and gynecology resident at Abington Jefferson Health.
Prior to the ERAS protocol, 99%-100% of patients took an opioid during the postoperative period. “With ERAS, 26% of patients never took an opioid during the postop period,” Dr. Ruymann and her associates reported. “Pain scores decreased with ERAS for postoperative days 1-3 and remained unchanged on day 4.”
One in 300 opioid-naive patients who receives opioids after cesarean delivery becomes a persistent user, one study has shown (Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Sep; 215(3):353.e1-18). “ERAS pathways integrate evidence-based interventions before, during, and after surgery to optimize outcomes, specifically to decrease postoperative opioid use,” the researchers said.
While other surgical fields have adopted ERAS pathways, more research is needed in obstetrics, said Dr. Ruymann. More than 4,500 women deliver at Abington Jefferson Health each year, and about a third undergo cesarean deliveries.
The organization’s ERAS pathway incorporates preoperative education, fasting guidelines, and intraoperative analgesia, nausea prophylaxis, and antimicrobial therapy. Under the new protocol, postoperative analgesia includes scheduled administration of nonopioid medications, including celecoxib and acetaminophen. In addition, patients may take 5-10 mg of oxycodone orally every 4 hours as needed, and hydromorphone 0.4 mg IV as needed may be used for refractory pain. In addition, patients should resume eating as soon as tolerated and be out of bed within 4 hours after surgery, according to the protocol. Postoperative management of pruritus and instructions on how to wean off opioids at home are among the other elements of the enhanced recovery plan.
To examine postoperative opioid usage before and after implementation of the ERAS pathway, the investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study of 316 women who underwent cesarean delivery 3 months before the start of the ERAS pathway and 267 who underwent cesarean delivery 3 months after. The researchers used an application developed in Qlik Sense, a data analytics platform, to calculate opioid usage.
Mean postoperative opioid use decreased by 62%. The reduction in opioid use remained 8 months after starting the ERAS pathway.
“An ERAS pathway for [cesarean delivery] decreases postoperative opioid usage by integrating a multimodal stepwise approach to pain control and recovery,” the researchers said. “Standardized order sets and departmentwide education were crucial in the success of ERAS. Additional research is needed to evaluate the impact of unique components of ERAS in order to optimize this pathway.”
The researchers had no disclosures.
SOURCE: Ruymann K et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jan;222(1):S212, Abstract 315.
GRAPEVINE, TEX. – An enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) pathway for cesarean delivery decreased postoperative opioid usage by 62% in one health care organization, researchers reported at the Pregnancy Meeting. The protocol incorporates a stepwise approach to pain control with no scheduled postoperative opioids.
Abington Jefferson Health, which includes two hospitals in Pennsylvania, implemented an ERAS pathway for all cesarean deliveries in October 2018. Kathryn Ruymann, MD, said at the meeting sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. Dr. Ruymann is an obstetrics and gynecology resident at Abington Jefferson Health.
Prior to the ERAS protocol, 99%-100% of patients took an opioid during the postoperative period. “With ERAS, 26% of patients never took an opioid during the postop period,” Dr. Ruymann and her associates reported. “Pain scores decreased with ERAS for postoperative days 1-3 and remained unchanged on day 4.”
One in 300 opioid-naive patients who receives opioids after cesarean delivery becomes a persistent user, one study has shown (Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Sep; 215(3):353.e1-18). “ERAS pathways integrate evidence-based interventions before, during, and after surgery to optimize outcomes, specifically to decrease postoperative opioid use,” the researchers said.
While other surgical fields have adopted ERAS pathways, more research is needed in obstetrics, said Dr. Ruymann. More than 4,500 women deliver at Abington Jefferson Health each year, and about a third undergo cesarean deliveries.
The organization’s ERAS pathway incorporates preoperative education, fasting guidelines, and intraoperative analgesia, nausea prophylaxis, and antimicrobial therapy. Under the new protocol, postoperative analgesia includes scheduled administration of nonopioid medications, including celecoxib and acetaminophen. In addition, patients may take 5-10 mg of oxycodone orally every 4 hours as needed, and hydromorphone 0.4 mg IV as needed may be used for refractory pain. In addition, patients should resume eating as soon as tolerated and be out of bed within 4 hours after surgery, according to the protocol. Postoperative management of pruritus and instructions on how to wean off opioids at home are among the other elements of the enhanced recovery plan.
To examine postoperative opioid usage before and after implementation of the ERAS pathway, the investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study of 316 women who underwent cesarean delivery 3 months before the start of the ERAS pathway and 267 who underwent cesarean delivery 3 months after. The researchers used an application developed in Qlik Sense, a data analytics platform, to calculate opioid usage.
Mean postoperative opioid use decreased by 62%. The reduction in opioid use remained 8 months after starting the ERAS pathway.
“An ERAS pathway for [cesarean delivery] decreases postoperative opioid usage by integrating a multimodal stepwise approach to pain control and recovery,” the researchers said. “Standardized order sets and departmentwide education were crucial in the success of ERAS. Additional research is needed to evaluate the impact of unique components of ERAS in order to optimize this pathway.”
The researchers had no disclosures.
SOURCE: Ruymann K et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Jan;222(1):S212, Abstract 315.
REPORTING FROM THE PREGNANCY MEETING
Salpingectomy adds little time and no complications to cesarean delivery
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS – Performing a total salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery added just over 6 minutes of operative time, compared with cesarean delivery and conventional sterilization, according to a recent systematic review and meta-analysis.
Although surgery took a little longer with salpingectomy, there was no increase in surgical complications, Jared Roeckner, MD, said in an interview at the Pregnancy Meeting, sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. “Total salpingectomy could provide an effective means of contraception and reduce the risk of future ovarian cancer,” he said.
Dr. Roeckner, a maternal-fetal medicine fellow at the University of South Florida, Tampa, explained in an interview that the systematic review and meta-analysis comprised 11 studies and included 320,443 women who received salpingectomy or standard sterilization methods. Eight cohort studies and three randomized controlled trials were included in the analysis, which was presented in a poster session at the meeting and in a simultaneous publication in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
The review’s results, wrote Dr. Roeckner and colleagues, “suggest total salpingectomy should be offered to women interested in ovarian cancer risk-reduction interventions [who] plan to undergo sterilization at the time of cesarean delivery.”
The eight cohort studies included 7,303 women. In these studies, women who received total salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery had operative time – defined as the time from skin incision to skin closure – 6.3 minutes longer than women who received a standard sterilization method (95% confidence interval, 3.5-9.1). The difference in duration of procedure for the three randomized controlled trials was not statistically significant between the two procedures.
Dr. Roeckner and colleagues noted that two of the randomized controlled trials reported times for the sterilization procedures. One study found a duration of 5.6 minutes for salpingectomy with a bipolar device and 6.1 minutes for tubal interruption; the other study compared salpingectomy with suture ligation and tubal interruption, finding operative times of 18.5 and 6.9 minutes, respectively.
In addition to the primary outcome of operative time, Dr. Roeckner and colleagues looked at rates of a variety of complications. These included transfusion, estimated blood loss, change in hemoglobin, wound infection, internal organ damage, readmission, reoperation, and length of stay. Salpingectomy was not associated with higher rates of any of these complications.
“Our main finding was that salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery may be associated with a small increase in operative time, but it doesn’t appear to be associated with an increased rate of surgical complications,” the researchers wrote.
One concern that’s been raised about the strategy of salpingectomy is the possibility of reduction of ovarian reserve related to decreased blood supply to the ovaries. However, noted Dr. Roeckner and coinvestigators, other studies have not shown decreases in anti-Müllerian hormone levels or other real-world signals for reduced ovarian reserve.
It’s true, the investigators acknowledged, that there is no possibility for reanastomosis and future fertility with salpingectomy. However, they observed that if the possibility for future fertility exists, conventional tubal ligation should not be performed.
Despite the thoroughness of the review and the investigators’ emphasis on adhering to best practices for systematic reviews and meta-analysis, they acknowledged that there were few studies, which resulted in some difficulties with statistical power. Still, they said, “there does not appear to be a trend toward increased complications among the salpingectomy cohort.”
Dr. Roeckner reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Roeckner J et al. Pregnancy Meeting, Abstract P180; Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Feb;135:3:550-7.
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS – Performing a total salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery added just over 6 minutes of operative time, compared with cesarean delivery and conventional sterilization, according to a recent systematic review and meta-analysis.
Although surgery took a little longer with salpingectomy, there was no increase in surgical complications, Jared Roeckner, MD, said in an interview at the Pregnancy Meeting, sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. “Total salpingectomy could provide an effective means of contraception and reduce the risk of future ovarian cancer,” he said.
Dr. Roeckner, a maternal-fetal medicine fellow at the University of South Florida, Tampa, explained in an interview that the systematic review and meta-analysis comprised 11 studies and included 320,443 women who received salpingectomy or standard sterilization methods. Eight cohort studies and three randomized controlled trials were included in the analysis, which was presented in a poster session at the meeting and in a simultaneous publication in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
The review’s results, wrote Dr. Roeckner and colleagues, “suggest total salpingectomy should be offered to women interested in ovarian cancer risk-reduction interventions [who] plan to undergo sterilization at the time of cesarean delivery.”
The eight cohort studies included 7,303 women. In these studies, women who received total salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery had operative time – defined as the time from skin incision to skin closure – 6.3 minutes longer than women who received a standard sterilization method (95% confidence interval, 3.5-9.1). The difference in duration of procedure for the three randomized controlled trials was not statistically significant between the two procedures.
Dr. Roeckner and colleagues noted that two of the randomized controlled trials reported times for the sterilization procedures. One study found a duration of 5.6 minutes for salpingectomy with a bipolar device and 6.1 minutes for tubal interruption; the other study compared salpingectomy with suture ligation and tubal interruption, finding operative times of 18.5 and 6.9 minutes, respectively.
In addition to the primary outcome of operative time, Dr. Roeckner and colleagues looked at rates of a variety of complications. These included transfusion, estimated blood loss, change in hemoglobin, wound infection, internal organ damage, readmission, reoperation, and length of stay. Salpingectomy was not associated with higher rates of any of these complications.
“Our main finding was that salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery may be associated with a small increase in operative time, but it doesn’t appear to be associated with an increased rate of surgical complications,” the researchers wrote.
One concern that’s been raised about the strategy of salpingectomy is the possibility of reduction of ovarian reserve related to decreased blood supply to the ovaries. However, noted Dr. Roeckner and coinvestigators, other studies have not shown decreases in anti-Müllerian hormone levels or other real-world signals for reduced ovarian reserve.
It’s true, the investigators acknowledged, that there is no possibility for reanastomosis and future fertility with salpingectomy. However, they observed that if the possibility for future fertility exists, conventional tubal ligation should not be performed.
Despite the thoroughness of the review and the investigators’ emphasis on adhering to best practices for systematic reviews and meta-analysis, they acknowledged that there were few studies, which resulted in some difficulties with statistical power. Still, they said, “there does not appear to be a trend toward increased complications among the salpingectomy cohort.”
Dr. Roeckner reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Roeckner J et al. Pregnancy Meeting, Abstract P180; Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Feb;135:3:550-7.
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS – Performing a total salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery added just over 6 minutes of operative time, compared with cesarean delivery and conventional sterilization, according to a recent systematic review and meta-analysis.
Although surgery took a little longer with salpingectomy, there was no increase in surgical complications, Jared Roeckner, MD, said in an interview at the Pregnancy Meeting, sponsored by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. “Total salpingectomy could provide an effective means of contraception and reduce the risk of future ovarian cancer,” he said.
Dr. Roeckner, a maternal-fetal medicine fellow at the University of South Florida, Tampa, explained in an interview that the systematic review and meta-analysis comprised 11 studies and included 320,443 women who received salpingectomy or standard sterilization methods. Eight cohort studies and three randomized controlled trials were included in the analysis, which was presented in a poster session at the meeting and in a simultaneous publication in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
The review’s results, wrote Dr. Roeckner and colleagues, “suggest total salpingectomy should be offered to women interested in ovarian cancer risk-reduction interventions [who] plan to undergo sterilization at the time of cesarean delivery.”
The eight cohort studies included 7,303 women. In these studies, women who received total salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery had operative time – defined as the time from skin incision to skin closure – 6.3 minutes longer than women who received a standard sterilization method (95% confidence interval, 3.5-9.1). The difference in duration of procedure for the three randomized controlled trials was not statistically significant between the two procedures.
Dr. Roeckner and colleagues noted that two of the randomized controlled trials reported times for the sterilization procedures. One study found a duration of 5.6 minutes for salpingectomy with a bipolar device and 6.1 minutes for tubal interruption; the other study compared salpingectomy with suture ligation and tubal interruption, finding operative times of 18.5 and 6.9 minutes, respectively.
In addition to the primary outcome of operative time, Dr. Roeckner and colleagues looked at rates of a variety of complications. These included transfusion, estimated blood loss, change in hemoglobin, wound infection, internal organ damage, readmission, reoperation, and length of stay. Salpingectomy was not associated with higher rates of any of these complications.
“Our main finding was that salpingectomy at the time of cesarean delivery may be associated with a small increase in operative time, but it doesn’t appear to be associated with an increased rate of surgical complications,” the researchers wrote.
One concern that’s been raised about the strategy of salpingectomy is the possibility of reduction of ovarian reserve related to decreased blood supply to the ovaries. However, noted Dr. Roeckner and coinvestigators, other studies have not shown decreases in anti-Müllerian hormone levels or other real-world signals for reduced ovarian reserve.
It’s true, the investigators acknowledged, that there is no possibility for reanastomosis and future fertility with salpingectomy. However, they observed that if the possibility for future fertility exists, conventional tubal ligation should not be performed.
Despite the thoroughness of the review and the investigators’ emphasis on adhering to best practices for systematic reviews and meta-analysis, they acknowledged that there were few studies, which resulted in some difficulties with statistical power. Still, they said, “there does not appear to be a trend toward increased complications among the salpingectomy cohort.”
Dr. Roeckner reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Roeckner J et al. Pregnancy Meeting, Abstract P180; Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Feb;135:3:550-7.
REPORTING FROM THE PREGNANCY MEETING
Stress incontinence surgery found to improve sexual dysfunction
An analysis of four commonly performed surgical procedures for stress urinary incontinence found that they all improved sexual dysfunction to a similar degree over the course of 24 months.
“There is a growing body of literature concerning female sexual function after treatment for urinary incontinence,” Stephanie M. Glass Clark, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues wrote in a study published in Obstetrics & Gynecology. “Pelvic floor muscle therapy has been shown to improve sexual function as well as urinary incontinence symptoms. Surgical treatment, on the other hand, has had unclear effects on sexual function.”
Dr. Glass Clark and colleagues conducted a combined secondary analysis of the SISTEr (Stress Incontinence Surgical Treatment Efficacy Trial) and TOMUS (Trial of Mid-Urethral Slings) studies. Women in the original trials were randomized to receive surgical treatment for stress urinary incontinence with an autologous fascial sling or Burch colposuspension (SISTEr), or a retropubic or transobturator midurethral sling (TOMUS). Sexual function as assessed by the short version of the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/ Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12) was compared between groups at baseline, 12 months, and 24 months.
Of the 924 women included, 249 (27%) had an autologous fascial sling, 239 (26%) underwent Burch colposuspension, 216 (23%) had a retropubic midurethral sling placed, and 220 (24%) had a transobturator midurethral sling placed. The researchers observed no significant differences in mean PISQ-12 scores between the four treatment groups at the time of baseline (P = .07) or at the 12- and 24-month visits (P = .42 and P = .50, respectively). Patients in the two studies showed an overall improvement in sexual function over the 24-month study period.
Specifically, PISQ-12 scores at baseline were 32.6 in the transobturator sling group, 33.1 in the retropubic sling group, 31.9 in the Burch procedure group, and 31.4 in the fascial sling group. At 12 months, the PISQ-12 scores rose to 37.7 in the transobturator sling group, 37.8 in the retropubic sling group, 36.9 in the Burch procedure group, and 37.1 in the fascial sling group. These scores were generally maintained at 24 months (37.7 in the transobturator sling group, 37.1 in the retropubic sling group, 36.7 in the Burch procedure group, and 37.4 in the fascial sling group), and were not statistically different than the scores tabulated at the 12-month follow-up visit (P = .97).
“This study and others demonstrate that sexual function improves with surgical improvement of stress incontinence which may suggest a possible association of urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction,” Dr. Glass Clark and colleagues concluded. “As we continue to explore the complex and multifaceted problem of sexual dysfunction, further evaluation of the effect of pelvic floor disorders – and their treatments – will be important and necessary research.”
The researchers acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that there was a low degree of diversity among women in the studied trials, which limits the generalizability of the findings. They also pointed out that the PISQ-12 does not address sexual stimulation or nonpenetrative vaginal intercourse. “Additionally, it limits partner-related problems to erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation; some eligible participants may be excluded secondary to sexual preferences given the assumptions inherent to the questionnaire that the partner is male,” they wrote.
This secondary analysis had no outside sources of funding. Dr. Glass Clark reported that she received a travel stipend from the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, sponsored by OB-STATS. Her coauthors reported having no financial conflicts.
SOURCE: Glass Clark SM et al. Obstet Gynecol 2020;135(2):352-60.
At face value, this is a retrospective analysis of sexual function after surgical correction for urinary incontinence. However, the researchers looked at two well-known and well-respected randomized, controlled trials comparing two types of incontinence procedures head to head, each. So the reader gets an opportunity to examine the influence of four different surgical procedures on sexual function.
Although I expected to see there would be an initial improvement with surgical correction, I did not expect that improvement would be so well maintained over time. There was sustained – and even continued – improvement in many cases, and this suggests a closer link to urinary incontinence that just embarrassment or worry about leakage during sex. I think the “take-home message” is that women who undergo anti-incontinence procedures can expect an improvement in sexual function from baseline, with the majority happening within the first year, and maintain this improvement between years 1 and 2.
I think this is the type of study that we all envisioned being able to do 25 years ago when female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery was in its infancy as an “official” subspecialty, and the National Institutes of Health had developed the Urinary Incontinence Network and the Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. It is gratifying that enough good research has been done to finally enjoy the fruits of their/our labor! The study had large numbers, used a widely known, validated questionnaire, and used data generated from randomized, controlled trials. Although the subjects may not represent all demographics, the study findings can be an aid to most practicing gynecologists to help counsel their patients.
The major limitations of any retrospective study are the inability to go back and ask questions not addressed in the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire Short Form. For instance, the authors discussed that it might be nice to have an “open-ended” question about why the nonresponders were not having sex.
Patrick Woodman, DO, MS , is a urogynecologist with the Michigan State University, East Lansing. He is also the program director for the obstetrics and gynecology residency for Ascension Macomb-Oakland Hospital, Warren (Michigan) Campus. Dr. Woodman is a member of the Ob.Gyn. News editorial advisory board.
At face value, this is a retrospective analysis of sexual function after surgical correction for urinary incontinence. However, the researchers looked at two well-known and well-respected randomized, controlled trials comparing two types of incontinence procedures head to head, each. So the reader gets an opportunity to examine the influence of four different surgical procedures on sexual function.
Although I expected to see there would be an initial improvement with surgical correction, I did not expect that improvement would be so well maintained over time. There was sustained – and even continued – improvement in many cases, and this suggests a closer link to urinary incontinence that just embarrassment or worry about leakage during sex. I think the “take-home message” is that women who undergo anti-incontinence procedures can expect an improvement in sexual function from baseline, with the majority happening within the first year, and maintain this improvement between years 1 and 2.
I think this is the type of study that we all envisioned being able to do 25 years ago when female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery was in its infancy as an “official” subspecialty, and the National Institutes of Health had developed the Urinary Incontinence Network and the Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. It is gratifying that enough good research has been done to finally enjoy the fruits of their/our labor! The study had large numbers, used a widely known, validated questionnaire, and used data generated from randomized, controlled trials. Although the subjects may not represent all demographics, the study findings can be an aid to most practicing gynecologists to help counsel their patients.
The major limitations of any retrospective study are the inability to go back and ask questions not addressed in the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire Short Form. For instance, the authors discussed that it might be nice to have an “open-ended” question about why the nonresponders were not having sex.
Patrick Woodman, DO, MS , is a urogynecologist with the Michigan State University, East Lansing. He is also the program director for the obstetrics and gynecology residency for Ascension Macomb-Oakland Hospital, Warren (Michigan) Campus. Dr. Woodman is a member of the Ob.Gyn. News editorial advisory board.
At face value, this is a retrospective analysis of sexual function after surgical correction for urinary incontinence. However, the researchers looked at two well-known and well-respected randomized, controlled trials comparing two types of incontinence procedures head to head, each. So the reader gets an opportunity to examine the influence of four different surgical procedures on sexual function.
Although I expected to see there would be an initial improvement with surgical correction, I did not expect that improvement would be so well maintained over time. There was sustained – and even continued – improvement in many cases, and this suggests a closer link to urinary incontinence that just embarrassment or worry about leakage during sex. I think the “take-home message” is that women who undergo anti-incontinence procedures can expect an improvement in sexual function from baseline, with the majority happening within the first year, and maintain this improvement between years 1 and 2.
I think this is the type of study that we all envisioned being able to do 25 years ago when female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery was in its infancy as an “official” subspecialty, and the National Institutes of Health had developed the Urinary Incontinence Network and the Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. It is gratifying that enough good research has been done to finally enjoy the fruits of their/our labor! The study had large numbers, used a widely known, validated questionnaire, and used data generated from randomized, controlled trials. Although the subjects may not represent all demographics, the study findings can be an aid to most practicing gynecologists to help counsel their patients.
The major limitations of any retrospective study are the inability to go back and ask questions not addressed in the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire Short Form. For instance, the authors discussed that it might be nice to have an “open-ended” question about why the nonresponders were not having sex.
Patrick Woodman, DO, MS , is a urogynecologist with the Michigan State University, East Lansing. He is also the program director for the obstetrics and gynecology residency for Ascension Macomb-Oakland Hospital, Warren (Michigan) Campus. Dr. Woodman is a member of the Ob.Gyn. News editorial advisory board.
An analysis of four commonly performed surgical procedures for stress urinary incontinence found that they all improved sexual dysfunction to a similar degree over the course of 24 months.
“There is a growing body of literature concerning female sexual function after treatment for urinary incontinence,” Stephanie M. Glass Clark, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues wrote in a study published in Obstetrics & Gynecology. “Pelvic floor muscle therapy has been shown to improve sexual function as well as urinary incontinence symptoms. Surgical treatment, on the other hand, has had unclear effects on sexual function.”
Dr. Glass Clark and colleagues conducted a combined secondary analysis of the SISTEr (Stress Incontinence Surgical Treatment Efficacy Trial) and TOMUS (Trial of Mid-Urethral Slings) studies. Women in the original trials were randomized to receive surgical treatment for stress urinary incontinence with an autologous fascial sling or Burch colposuspension (SISTEr), or a retropubic or transobturator midurethral sling (TOMUS). Sexual function as assessed by the short version of the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/ Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12) was compared between groups at baseline, 12 months, and 24 months.
Of the 924 women included, 249 (27%) had an autologous fascial sling, 239 (26%) underwent Burch colposuspension, 216 (23%) had a retropubic midurethral sling placed, and 220 (24%) had a transobturator midurethral sling placed. The researchers observed no significant differences in mean PISQ-12 scores between the four treatment groups at the time of baseline (P = .07) or at the 12- and 24-month visits (P = .42 and P = .50, respectively). Patients in the two studies showed an overall improvement in sexual function over the 24-month study period.
Specifically, PISQ-12 scores at baseline were 32.6 in the transobturator sling group, 33.1 in the retropubic sling group, 31.9 in the Burch procedure group, and 31.4 in the fascial sling group. At 12 months, the PISQ-12 scores rose to 37.7 in the transobturator sling group, 37.8 in the retropubic sling group, 36.9 in the Burch procedure group, and 37.1 in the fascial sling group. These scores were generally maintained at 24 months (37.7 in the transobturator sling group, 37.1 in the retropubic sling group, 36.7 in the Burch procedure group, and 37.4 in the fascial sling group), and were not statistically different than the scores tabulated at the 12-month follow-up visit (P = .97).
“This study and others demonstrate that sexual function improves with surgical improvement of stress incontinence which may suggest a possible association of urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction,” Dr. Glass Clark and colleagues concluded. “As we continue to explore the complex and multifaceted problem of sexual dysfunction, further evaluation of the effect of pelvic floor disorders – and their treatments – will be important and necessary research.”
The researchers acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that there was a low degree of diversity among women in the studied trials, which limits the generalizability of the findings. They also pointed out that the PISQ-12 does not address sexual stimulation or nonpenetrative vaginal intercourse. “Additionally, it limits partner-related problems to erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation; some eligible participants may be excluded secondary to sexual preferences given the assumptions inherent to the questionnaire that the partner is male,” they wrote.
This secondary analysis had no outside sources of funding. Dr. Glass Clark reported that she received a travel stipend from the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, sponsored by OB-STATS. Her coauthors reported having no financial conflicts.
SOURCE: Glass Clark SM et al. Obstet Gynecol 2020;135(2):352-60.
An analysis of four commonly performed surgical procedures for stress urinary incontinence found that they all improved sexual dysfunction to a similar degree over the course of 24 months.
“There is a growing body of literature concerning female sexual function after treatment for urinary incontinence,” Stephanie M. Glass Clark, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues wrote in a study published in Obstetrics & Gynecology. “Pelvic floor muscle therapy has been shown to improve sexual function as well as urinary incontinence symptoms. Surgical treatment, on the other hand, has had unclear effects on sexual function.”
Dr. Glass Clark and colleagues conducted a combined secondary analysis of the SISTEr (Stress Incontinence Surgical Treatment Efficacy Trial) and TOMUS (Trial of Mid-Urethral Slings) studies. Women in the original trials were randomized to receive surgical treatment for stress urinary incontinence with an autologous fascial sling or Burch colposuspension (SISTEr), or a retropubic or transobturator midurethral sling (TOMUS). Sexual function as assessed by the short version of the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/ Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12) was compared between groups at baseline, 12 months, and 24 months.
Of the 924 women included, 249 (27%) had an autologous fascial sling, 239 (26%) underwent Burch colposuspension, 216 (23%) had a retropubic midurethral sling placed, and 220 (24%) had a transobturator midurethral sling placed. The researchers observed no significant differences in mean PISQ-12 scores between the four treatment groups at the time of baseline (P = .07) or at the 12- and 24-month visits (P = .42 and P = .50, respectively). Patients in the two studies showed an overall improvement in sexual function over the 24-month study period.
Specifically, PISQ-12 scores at baseline were 32.6 in the transobturator sling group, 33.1 in the retropubic sling group, 31.9 in the Burch procedure group, and 31.4 in the fascial sling group. At 12 months, the PISQ-12 scores rose to 37.7 in the transobturator sling group, 37.8 in the retropubic sling group, 36.9 in the Burch procedure group, and 37.1 in the fascial sling group. These scores were generally maintained at 24 months (37.7 in the transobturator sling group, 37.1 in the retropubic sling group, 36.7 in the Burch procedure group, and 37.4 in the fascial sling group), and were not statistically different than the scores tabulated at the 12-month follow-up visit (P = .97).
“This study and others demonstrate that sexual function improves with surgical improvement of stress incontinence which may suggest a possible association of urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction,” Dr. Glass Clark and colleagues concluded. “As we continue to explore the complex and multifaceted problem of sexual dysfunction, further evaluation of the effect of pelvic floor disorders – and their treatments – will be important and necessary research.”
The researchers acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that there was a low degree of diversity among women in the studied trials, which limits the generalizability of the findings. They also pointed out that the PISQ-12 does not address sexual stimulation or nonpenetrative vaginal intercourse. “Additionally, it limits partner-related problems to erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation; some eligible participants may be excluded secondary to sexual preferences given the assumptions inherent to the questionnaire that the partner is male,” they wrote.
This secondary analysis had no outside sources of funding. Dr. Glass Clark reported that she received a travel stipend from the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, sponsored by OB-STATS. Her coauthors reported having no financial conflicts.
SOURCE: Glass Clark SM et al. Obstet Gynecol 2020;135(2):352-60.
FROM OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
In hysterectomy, consider wider risks of ovary removal
LAS VEGAS – While it’s fading in popularity, ovary removal in hysterectomy is still far from uncommon. A gynecologic surgeon urged colleagues to give deeper consideration to whether the ovaries can stay in place.
“Gynecologists should truly familiarize themselves with the data on cardiovascular, endocrine, bone, and sexual health implications of removing the ovaries when there isn’t a medical indication to do so,” Amanda Nickles Fader, MD, director of the Kelly gynecologic oncology service and the director of the center for rare gynecologic cancers at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, said in an interview following her presentation at the Pelvic Anatomy and Gynecologic Surgery Symposium.
“Until I started giving this talk, I thought I knew this data. However, once I took a deeper dive into the studies of how hormonally active the postmenopausal ovaries are, as well as the population-based studies demonstrating worse all-cause mortality outcomes in low-risk women who have their ovaries surgically removed prior to their 60s, I was stunned at how compelling this data is,” she said.
The conventional wisdom about ovary removal in hysterectomy has changed dramatically over the decades. As Dr. Nickles Fader explained in the interview, “in the ’80s and early ’90s, the mantra was ‘just take everything out’ at hysterectomy surgery – tubes and ovaries should be removed – without understanding the implications. Then in the late ’90s and early 2000s, it was a more selective strategy of ‘wait until menopause to remove the ovaries.’ ”
Now, “more contemporary data suggests that the ovaries appear to be hormonally active to some degree well into the seventh decade of life, and even women in their early 60s who have their ovaries removed without a medical indication may be harmed.”
Still, ovary removal occurs in about 50%-60% of the 450,000-500,000 hysterectomies performed each year in the United States, Dr. Nickles Fader said at the meeting, which was jointly provided by Global Academy for Medical Education and the University of Cincinnati. Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same company.
These findings seem to suggest that messages about the potential benefits of ovary preservation are not getting through to surgeons and patients.
Indeed, a 2017 study of 57,776 benign premenopausal hysterectomies with ovary removal in California from 2005 to 2011 found that 38% had no documented sign of an appropriate diagnosis signaling a need for oophorectomy. These included “ovarian cyst, breast cancer susceptibility gene carrier status, and other diagnoses,” the study authors wrote (Menopause. 2017 Aug;24[8]:947-53).
Dr. Nickles Fader emphasized that ovary removal is appropriate in cases of gynecologic malignancy, while patients at high genetic risk of ovarian cancer may consider salpingo-oophorectomy or salpingectomy.
What about other situations? She offered these pearls in the presentation:
- Don’t remove ovaries before age 60 “without a good reason” because the procedure may lower lifespan and increase cardiovascular risk.
- Ovary removal is linked to cognitive decline, Parkinson’s disease, depression and anxiety, glaucoma, sexual dysfunction, and bone fractures.
- Ovary preservation, in contrast, is linked to improvement of menopausal symptoms, sleep quality, urogenital atrophy, skin conditions, and metabolism.
- Fallopian tubes may be the true trouble area. “The prevailing theory amongst scientists and clinicians is that ‘ovarian cancer’ is in most cases a misnomer, and most of these malignancies start in the fallopian tube,” Dr. Nickles Fader said in the interview.
“It’s a better time than ever to be thoughtful about removing a woman’s ovaries in someone who is at low risk for ovarian cancer. The new, universal guideline is that
Dr. Nickles Fader disclosed consulting work for Ethicon and Merck.
LAS VEGAS – While it’s fading in popularity, ovary removal in hysterectomy is still far from uncommon. A gynecologic surgeon urged colleagues to give deeper consideration to whether the ovaries can stay in place.
“Gynecologists should truly familiarize themselves with the data on cardiovascular, endocrine, bone, and sexual health implications of removing the ovaries when there isn’t a medical indication to do so,” Amanda Nickles Fader, MD, director of the Kelly gynecologic oncology service and the director of the center for rare gynecologic cancers at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, said in an interview following her presentation at the Pelvic Anatomy and Gynecologic Surgery Symposium.
“Until I started giving this talk, I thought I knew this data. However, once I took a deeper dive into the studies of how hormonally active the postmenopausal ovaries are, as well as the population-based studies demonstrating worse all-cause mortality outcomes in low-risk women who have their ovaries surgically removed prior to their 60s, I was stunned at how compelling this data is,” she said.
The conventional wisdom about ovary removal in hysterectomy has changed dramatically over the decades. As Dr. Nickles Fader explained in the interview, “in the ’80s and early ’90s, the mantra was ‘just take everything out’ at hysterectomy surgery – tubes and ovaries should be removed – without understanding the implications. Then in the late ’90s and early 2000s, it was a more selective strategy of ‘wait until menopause to remove the ovaries.’ ”
Now, “more contemporary data suggests that the ovaries appear to be hormonally active to some degree well into the seventh decade of life, and even women in their early 60s who have their ovaries removed without a medical indication may be harmed.”
Still, ovary removal occurs in about 50%-60% of the 450,000-500,000 hysterectomies performed each year in the United States, Dr. Nickles Fader said at the meeting, which was jointly provided by Global Academy for Medical Education and the University of Cincinnati. Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same company.
These findings seem to suggest that messages about the potential benefits of ovary preservation are not getting through to surgeons and patients.
Indeed, a 2017 study of 57,776 benign premenopausal hysterectomies with ovary removal in California from 2005 to 2011 found that 38% had no documented sign of an appropriate diagnosis signaling a need for oophorectomy. These included “ovarian cyst, breast cancer susceptibility gene carrier status, and other diagnoses,” the study authors wrote (Menopause. 2017 Aug;24[8]:947-53).
Dr. Nickles Fader emphasized that ovary removal is appropriate in cases of gynecologic malignancy, while patients at high genetic risk of ovarian cancer may consider salpingo-oophorectomy or salpingectomy.
What about other situations? She offered these pearls in the presentation:
- Don’t remove ovaries before age 60 “without a good reason” because the procedure may lower lifespan and increase cardiovascular risk.
- Ovary removal is linked to cognitive decline, Parkinson’s disease, depression and anxiety, glaucoma, sexual dysfunction, and bone fractures.
- Ovary preservation, in contrast, is linked to improvement of menopausal symptoms, sleep quality, urogenital atrophy, skin conditions, and metabolism.
- Fallopian tubes may be the true trouble area. “The prevailing theory amongst scientists and clinicians is that ‘ovarian cancer’ is in most cases a misnomer, and most of these malignancies start in the fallopian tube,” Dr. Nickles Fader said in the interview.
“It’s a better time than ever to be thoughtful about removing a woman’s ovaries in someone who is at low risk for ovarian cancer. The new, universal guideline is that
Dr. Nickles Fader disclosed consulting work for Ethicon and Merck.
LAS VEGAS – While it’s fading in popularity, ovary removal in hysterectomy is still far from uncommon. A gynecologic surgeon urged colleagues to give deeper consideration to whether the ovaries can stay in place.
“Gynecologists should truly familiarize themselves with the data on cardiovascular, endocrine, bone, and sexual health implications of removing the ovaries when there isn’t a medical indication to do so,” Amanda Nickles Fader, MD, director of the Kelly gynecologic oncology service and the director of the center for rare gynecologic cancers at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, said in an interview following her presentation at the Pelvic Anatomy and Gynecologic Surgery Symposium.
“Until I started giving this talk, I thought I knew this data. However, once I took a deeper dive into the studies of how hormonally active the postmenopausal ovaries are, as well as the population-based studies demonstrating worse all-cause mortality outcomes in low-risk women who have their ovaries surgically removed prior to their 60s, I was stunned at how compelling this data is,” she said.
The conventional wisdom about ovary removal in hysterectomy has changed dramatically over the decades. As Dr. Nickles Fader explained in the interview, “in the ’80s and early ’90s, the mantra was ‘just take everything out’ at hysterectomy surgery – tubes and ovaries should be removed – without understanding the implications. Then in the late ’90s and early 2000s, it was a more selective strategy of ‘wait until menopause to remove the ovaries.’ ”
Now, “more contemporary data suggests that the ovaries appear to be hormonally active to some degree well into the seventh decade of life, and even women in their early 60s who have their ovaries removed without a medical indication may be harmed.”
Still, ovary removal occurs in about 50%-60% of the 450,000-500,000 hysterectomies performed each year in the United States, Dr. Nickles Fader said at the meeting, which was jointly provided by Global Academy for Medical Education and the University of Cincinnati. Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same company.
These findings seem to suggest that messages about the potential benefits of ovary preservation are not getting through to surgeons and patients.
Indeed, a 2017 study of 57,776 benign premenopausal hysterectomies with ovary removal in California from 2005 to 2011 found that 38% had no documented sign of an appropriate diagnosis signaling a need for oophorectomy. These included “ovarian cyst, breast cancer susceptibility gene carrier status, and other diagnoses,” the study authors wrote (Menopause. 2017 Aug;24[8]:947-53).
Dr. Nickles Fader emphasized that ovary removal is appropriate in cases of gynecologic malignancy, while patients at high genetic risk of ovarian cancer may consider salpingo-oophorectomy or salpingectomy.
What about other situations? She offered these pearls in the presentation:
- Don’t remove ovaries before age 60 “without a good reason” because the procedure may lower lifespan and increase cardiovascular risk.
- Ovary removal is linked to cognitive decline, Parkinson’s disease, depression and anxiety, glaucoma, sexual dysfunction, and bone fractures.
- Ovary preservation, in contrast, is linked to improvement of menopausal symptoms, sleep quality, urogenital atrophy, skin conditions, and metabolism.
- Fallopian tubes may be the true trouble area. “The prevailing theory amongst scientists and clinicians is that ‘ovarian cancer’ is in most cases a misnomer, and most of these malignancies start in the fallopian tube,” Dr. Nickles Fader said in the interview.
“It’s a better time than ever to be thoughtful about removing a woman’s ovaries in someone who is at low risk for ovarian cancer. The new, universal guideline is that
Dr. Nickles Fader disclosed consulting work for Ethicon and Merck.
EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM PAGS 2019
IBD fertility has improved
AUSTIN, TEX. – Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who want to have children can benefit from better education about recent findings that disease control, laparoscopic surgery, and in vitro fertilization (IVF) have improved their chances of conceiving, according to a review of published reports presented here at the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress, a partnership of the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress Foundation and the American Gastroenterological Association.
“Decreased fertility in IBD is due to voluntary childlessness, which we can change with education; surgery for IBD, which we can improve with laparoscopic surgery; and increased disease activity, which we can also make a difference in,” Sonia Friedman, MD, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview.
Dr. Friedman and coauthors last year published an analysis of the Danish National Birth Cohort, which showed women with IBD had an 28% greater relative risk of taking a year or more to get pregnant than controls without IBD, and that the relative risk was even higher in women with Crohn’s disease — 54% (Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2019.08.031). “We found that women with Crohn’s surgery had decreased fertility by 2.54 times greater relative risk,” she said.
“Fertility, pregnancy is the most important thing to patients,” Dr. Friedman said in an interview. “That’s what people ask me about the most. In the population of IBD patients, the onset is age 15-35, and these people are in the prime of their reproductive years.” Sexual function, known to be decreased in men and women with IBD, is also an overriding concern in these patients, she said. “There needs to be a lot more information out there about it.”
She said gastroenterologists should keep in mind that much of the evidence documenting reduced fertility after ileo-pouch anal anastomosis is dated and focused on open surgery, which caused profound scarring of the pelvis and fallopian tubes, thus hindering conception. Laparoscopic ileoanal J-pouch surgery (IPAA) has yielded much improved outcomes in women of child-bearing age, she said, citing a study late last year that reported women who had laparoscopic IPAA had a median time to pregnancy of 3.5 months versus 9 months for women who had open IPAA (Surgery. 2019;166:670-7).
“It’s really important to discuss the issues of fertility, especially for patients contemplating surgery,” Dr. Friedman said. “Emphasize that there are good outcomes with laparoscopic surgery, and they can have assisted reproductive technology [ART], or in vitro fertilization, if needed. Never withhold surgery based on fear of infertility.”
Her practice is to refer women with IBD in remission for IVF if they’ve tried to get pregnant every month for a year or more and to refer women with IBD surgery for IVF after trying to get pregnant for 6 months. Dr. Friedman coauthored two studies of the Danish National Birth Cohort of ART in women with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis (UC) along with controls (Gut. 2016;65:767-76; Gut. 2017;66:556-58). “We found that women with Crohn’s and UC had a decreased chance of having a clinical pregnancy, but they had no problem carrying the pregnancy to term,” she said.
Those findings raised questions about the etiology of decreased fertility in IBD patients, which could include factors such as IVF technique, reproductive hormone and microbiome changes, or IBD medications. “How can we carry that forward to all women with IBD?” she said. Women with IBD have less chance of conceiving with each IVF treatment cycle than do women without IBD, she said. “The most interesting thing is that the reduced chance of live birth after IVF treatment in Crohn’s and UC is related to the stages of implantation and not to the ability to maintain the fetus throughout pregnancy,” she said.
Dr. Friedman has no financial relationships to disclose.
SOURCE: Friedman S. Crohn’s & Colitis Congress, Session Sp86.
AUSTIN, TEX. – Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who want to have children can benefit from better education about recent findings that disease control, laparoscopic surgery, and in vitro fertilization (IVF) have improved their chances of conceiving, according to a review of published reports presented here at the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress, a partnership of the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress Foundation and the American Gastroenterological Association.
“Decreased fertility in IBD is due to voluntary childlessness, which we can change with education; surgery for IBD, which we can improve with laparoscopic surgery; and increased disease activity, which we can also make a difference in,” Sonia Friedman, MD, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview.
Dr. Friedman and coauthors last year published an analysis of the Danish National Birth Cohort, which showed women with IBD had an 28% greater relative risk of taking a year or more to get pregnant than controls without IBD, and that the relative risk was even higher in women with Crohn’s disease — 54% (Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2019.08.031). “We found that women with Crohn’s surgery had decreased fertility by 2.54 times greater relative risk,” she said.
“Fertility, pregnancy is the most important thing to patients,” Dr. Friedman said in an interview. “That’s what people ask me about the most. In the population of IBD patients, the onset is age 15-35, and these people are in the prime of their reproductive years.” Sexual function, known to be decreased in men and women with IBD, is also an overriding concern in these patients, she said. “There needs to be a lot more information out there about it.”
She said gastroenterologists should keep in mind that much of the evidence documenting reduced fertility after ileo-pouch anal anastomosis is dated and focused on open surgery, which caused profound scarring of the pelvis and fallopian tubes, thus hindering conception. Laparoscopic ileoanal J-pouch surgery (IPAA) has yielded much improved outcomes in women of child-bearing age, she said, citing a study late last year that reported women who had laparoscopic IPAA had a median time to pregnancy of 3.5 months versus 9 months for women who had open IPAA (Surgery. 2019;166:670-7).
“It’s really important to discuss the issues of fertility, especially for patients contemplating surgery,” Dr. Friedman said. “Emphasize that there are good outcomes with laparoscopic surgery, and they can have assisted reproductive technology [ART], or in vitro fertilization, if needed. Never withhold surgery based on fear of infertility.”
Her practice is to refer women with IBD in remission for IVF if they’ve tried to get pregnant every month for a year or more and to refer women with IBD surgery for IVF after trying to get pregnant for 6 months. Dr. Friedman coauthored two studies of the Danish National Birth Cohort of ART in women with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis (UC) along with controls (Gut. 2016;65:767-76; Gut. 2017;66:556-58). “We found that women with Crohn’s and UC had a decreased chance of having a clinical pregnancy, but they had no problem carrying the pregnancy to term,” she said.
Those findings raised questions about the etiology of decreased fertility in IBD patients, which could include factors such as IVF technique, reproductive hormone and microbiome changes, or IBD medications. “How can we carry that forward to all women with IBD?” she said. Women with IBD have less chance of conceiving with each IVF treatment cycle than do women without IBD, she said. “The most interesting thing is that the reduced chance of live birth after IVF treatment in Crohn’s and UC is related to the stages of implantation and not to the ability to maintain the fetus throughout pregnancy,” she said.
Dr. Friedman has no financial relationships to disclose.
SOURCE: Friedman S. Crohn’s & Colitis Congress, Session Sp86.
AUSTIN, TEX. – Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who want to have children can benefit from better education about recent findings that disease control, laparoscopic surgery, and in vitro fertilization (IVF) have improved their chances of conceiving, according to a review of published reports presented here at the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress, a partnership of the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress Foundation and the American Gastroenterological Association.
“Decreased fertility in IBD is due to voluntary childlessness, which we can change with education; surgery for IBD, which we can improve with laparoscopic surgery; and increased disease activity, which we can also make a difference in,” Sonia Friedman, MD, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview.
Dr. Friedman and coauthors last year published an analysis of the Danish National Birth Cohort, which showed women with IBD had an 28% greater relative risk of taking a year or more to get pregnant than controls without IBD, and that the relative risk was even higher in women with Crohn’s disease — 54% (Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2019.08.031). “We found that women with Crohn’s surgery had decreased fertility by 2.54 times greater relative risk,” she said.
“Fertility, pregnancy is the most important thing to patients,” Dr. Friedman said in an interview. “That’s what people ask me about the most. In the population of IBD patients, the onset is age 15-35, and these people are in the prime of their reproductive years.” Sexual function, known to be decreased in men and women with IBD, is also an overriding concern in these patients, she said. “There needs to be a lot more information out there about it.”
She said gastroenterologists should keep in mind that much of the evidence documenting reduced fertility after ileo-pouch anal anastomosis is dated and focused on open surgery, which caused profound scarring of the pelvis and fallopian tubes, thus hindering conception. Laparoscopic ileoanal J-pouch surgery (IPAA) has yielded much improved outcomes in women of child-bearing age, she said, citing a study late last year that reported women who had laparoscopic IPAA had a median time to pregnancy of 3.5 months versus 9 months for women who had open IPAA (Surgery. 2019;166:670-7).
“It’s really important to discuss the issues of fertility, especially for patients contemplating surgery,” Dr. Friedman said. “Emphasize that there are good outcomes with laparoscopic surgery, and they can have assisted reproductive technology [ART], or in vitro fertilization, if needed. Never withhold surgery based on fear of infertility.”
Her practice is to refer women with IBD in remission for IVF if they’ve tried to get pregnant every month for a year or more and to refer women with IBD surgery for IVF after trying to get pregnant for 6 months. Dr. Friedman coauthored two studies of the Danish National Birth Cohort of ART in women with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis (UC) along with controls (Gut. 2016;65:767-76; Gut. 2017;66:556-58). “We found that women with Crohn’s and UC had a decreased chance of having a clinical pregnancy, but they had no problem carrying the pregnancy to term,” she said.
Those findings raised questions about the etiology of decreased fertility in IBD patients, which could include factors such as IVF technique, reproductive hormone and microbiome changes, or IBD medications. “How can we carry that forward to all women with IBD?” she said. Women with IBD have less chance of conceiving with each IVF treatment cycle than do women without IBD, she said. “The most interesting thing is that the reduced chance of live birth after IVF treatment in Crohn’s and UC is related to the stages of implantation and not to the ability to maintain the fetus throughout pregnancy,” she said.
Dr. Friedman has no financial relationships to disclose.
SOURCE: Friedman S. Crohn’s & Colitis Congress, Session Sp86.
REPORTING FROM CROHN’S & COLITIS CONGRESS
The removal of the multiple-kilogram uterus using MIGSs
It has now been 30 years since the first total laparoscopic hysterectomy was performed. The benefits of minimally invasive gynecologic surgery (MIGS) – and of minimally invasive hysterectomy specifically – are now well documented. Since this milestone procedure, both instrumentation and technique have improved significantly.
These latter two factors – a very large uterus (which we define as more than 15-16 weeks’ gestational size) and a BMI over 60 kg/m2 – historically were considered to be contraindications to laparoscopic hysterectomy. But as the proficiency, comfort, and skill of a new generation of laparoscopic surgeons increases, the tide is shifting with respect to both morbid obesity and the very large uterus.
With growing experience and improved instrumentation, the majority of gynecologists who are fellowship-trained in MIGS are able to routinely and safely perform laparoscopic hysterectomy for uteri weighing 1-2 kg and in patients who have extreme morbid obesity. The literature, moreover, increasingly features case reports of laparoscopic removal of very large uteri and reviews/discussions of total laparoscopic hysterectomy being feasible.
In our own experience, total laparoscopic hysterectomy (TLH) of the very large uterus can be safely and advantageously performed using key instruments and refinements in technique, as well as thorough patient counseling regarding the risk of unexpected sarcomas. Recently, we safely performed total laparoscopic hysterectomy for a patient with a uterus that – somewhat unexpectedly – weighed 7.4 kg.
Surgical pearls
Performing safe and effective total laparoscopic hysterectomy for large uteri – and for morbidly obese patients – hinges largely on modifications in entry and port placement, patient positioning, and choice of instrumentation. With these modifications, we can achieve adequate visualization of critical anatomy and can minimize bleeding. Otherwise, the surgery itself is largely the same. Here are the principles we find most helpful.
Entry and port placement
Traditionally, for TLHs, a camera port is placed at the umbilicus to provide a full view of the pelvis. For the larger uterus – and in women who are extremely obese – we aim to introduce the laparoscope higher. A reliable landmark is the Palmer’s point in the left upper quadrant. From here, we can identify areas for the placement of additional trocars.
In general, we place ancillary 5-mm ports more cephalad and lateral to the uterus than we otherwise would. Such placement facilitates effective visualization while accommodating manipulation of the uterus and allows us to avoid bleeding around the vascular upper pedicles. Overall, we have much better control through all parts of the surgery when we operate lateral to the uterus.
Patient positioning
In addition to the Trendelenburg position, we have adopted an “airplaning” technique for patients with a very large uterus in which the bed is tilted from side to side so that the left and right sides of the body are rotated upward as needed. This allows for gravitational-assisted retraction when it otherwise is not possible.
Instrumentation
For morbidly obese patients, we use Kii Fios advanced fixation trocars. These come in 5- and 10-mm sizes and are equipped with an intraperitoneal balloon that can be inflated to prevent sliding of the trocar out of the abdominal wall.
By far the most valuable instrument for the morbidly obese and the very large uterus is a 30-degree laparoscope. With our higher port placement as described, the 30-degree scope provides visualization of critical structures that wouldn’t be possible with a 0-degree scope.
The Rumi uterine manipulator comes with cups that come in different sizes and can fit around the cervix and help delineate the cervicouterine junction. We use this manipulator for all laparoscopic hysterectomies, but it is a must for the very large uterus.
Extensive desiccation of the utero-ovarian pedicles and uterine arteries is critical, and for this we advise using the rotating bipolar RoBi instrument. Use of the conventional bipolar instrument allows us to use targeted and anatomically guided application of energy. This ensures certainty that vessels whose limits exceed the diameter for advanced bipolar devices (typically 7 mm) are completely sealed. In-depth knowledge of pelvic anatomy and advanced laparoscopic dissection is paramount during these steps to ensure that vital structures are not damaged by the wider thermal spread of the traditional bipolar device. For cutting, the use of ultrasonic energy is important to prevent energy from spreading laterally.
Lastly, we recommend a good suction irrigator because, if bleeding occurs, it tends to be heavy because of the enlarged nature of feeding vasculature. When placed through an umbilical or suprapubic port, the suction irrigator also may be used to help with the rotational vectors and traction for further uterine manipulation.
Technique
We usually operate from top to bottom, transecting the upper pedicles such as the infundibulopelvic (IP) ligaments or utero-ovarian ligaments first, rather than the round ligaments. This helps us achieve additional mobility of the uterus. Some surgeons believe that retroperitoneal dissection and ligation of the uterine arteries at their origin is essential, but we find that, with good uterine manipulation and the use of a 30-degree scope, we achieve adequate visualization for identifying the ureter and uterine artery on the sidewall and consequently do not need to dissect retroperitoneally.
When using the uterine manipulator with the colpotomy cup, the uterus is pushed upward, increasing the distance between the vaginal fornix and the ureters. Uterine arteries can easily be identified and desiccated using conventional bipolar energy. When the colpotomy cup is pushed cephalad, the application of the bipolar energy within the limits of the cup is safe. The thermal spread does not pose a threat to the ureters, which are displaced 1.5-2 cm laterally. Large fibroids often contribute to distorted anatomical planes, and a colpotomy cup provides a firm palpable surface between the cervix and vagina during dissection.
When dealing with large uteri, one must sometimes think outside the box and deviate from standard technique. For instance, in patients with distorted anatomy because of large fibroids, it helps to first control the pedicles that are most easily accessible. Sometimes it is acceptable to perform oophorectomy if the IP ligament is more accessible and the utero-ovarian pedicle is distorted by dilated veins and adherent to the uterus. After transection of each pedicle, we gain more mobility of the uterus and better visualization for the next step.
Inserting the camera through ancillary ports – a technique known as “port hopping” – helps to visualize and take down adhesions much better and more safely than using the camera from the umbilical port only. Port hopping with a 30-degree laparoscope helps to obtain a 360-degree view of adhesions and anatomy, which is exceedingly helpful in cases in which crucial anatomical structures are within close proximity of one another.
In general it is more challenging to perform TLH on a patient with a broad uterus or a patient with low posterior fibroids that are occupying the pelvis than on a patient with fibroids in the upper abdomen. The main challenge for the surgeon is to safely secure the uterine arteries and control the blood supply to the uterus.
Access to the pelvic sidewall is obtained with the combination of 30-degree scope, uterine manipulator, and the suction irrigator introduced through the midline port; the cervix and uterus are deviated upward. Instead of the suction irrigator or blunt dissector used for internal uterine manipulation, some surgeons use myoma screws or a 5-mm single-tooth tenaculum to manipulate a large uterus. Both of those instruments are valuable and work well, but often a large uterus requires extensive manipulation. Repositioning of any sharp instruments that pierce the serosa can often lead to additional blood loss. It is preferable to avoid this blood loss on a large uterus at all costs because it can be brisk and stains the surgical pedicles, making the remainder of the procedure unnecessarily difficult.
Once the uterine arteries are desiccated, if fibroids are obscuring the view, the corpus of the uterus can be detached from the cervix as in supracervical hysterectomy fashion. From there, the uterus can be placed in the upper abdomen while colpotomy can be performed.
In patients with multiple fibroids, we do not recommend performing myomectomy first, unless the fibroid is pedunculated and on a very small stalk. Improved uterine manipulation and retroperitoneal dissection are preferred over myomectomy to safely complete hysterectomy for the broad uterus. In our opinion, any attempt at myomectomy would lead to unnecessary blood loss and additional operative time with minimal benefit.
In patients with fibroids that grow into the broad ligament and pelvic sidewall, the natural course of the ureter becomes displaced laterally. This is contrary to the popular misconception that the ureter is more medially located in the setting of broad-ligament fibroids. To ensure safe access to the uterine arteries, the vesicouterine peritoneum can be incised and extended cephalad along the broad ligament and, then, using the above-mentioned technique, by pushing the uterus and the fibroid to the contralateral side via the suction irrigator, the uterine arteries can be easily accessed.
Another useful technique is to use diluted vasopressin injected into the lower pole of the uterus to cause vasoconstriction and minimize the bleeding. The concentration is 1 cc of 20 units of vasopressin in 100-400 cc of saline. This technique is very useful for myomectomies, and some surgeons find it also helpful for hysterectomy. The plasma half-life of vasopressin is 10-20 minutes, and a large quantity is needed to help with vasoconstriction in a big uterus. The safe upper limits of vasopressin dosing are not firmly established. A fibroid uterus with aberrant vasculature may require a greater-than-acceptable dose to control bleeding.
It is important to ensure that patients have an optimized hemoglobin level preoperatively. We use a hemoglobin level of 8 g/dL as a lowest cutoff value for performing TLH without preoperative transfusion. Regarding bowel preparation, neither the literature nor our own experience support its value, so we typically do not use it.
Morcellation and patient counseling
Uteri up to 12 weeks’ gestational size usually can be extracted transvaginally, and most uteri regardless of size can be morcellated and extracted through the vagina, providing that the vaginal fornix is accessible from below. In some cases, such as when the apex is too high, a minilaparotomic incision is needed to extract the uterus, or when available, power morcellation can be performed.
A major challenge, given our growing ability to laparoscopically remove very larger uteri, is that uteri heavier than about 2.5 kg in weight cannot be morcellated inside a morcellation bag. The risk of upstaging a known or suspected uterine malignancy, or of spreading an unknown malignant sarcoma (presumed benign myoma), should be incorporated in each patient’s decision making.
Thorough counseling about surgical options and on the risks of morcellating a very large uterus without containment in a bag is essential. Each patient must understand the risks and decide whether the benefits of minimally invasive surgery outweigh these risks. While MRI can sometimes provide increased suspicion of a leiomyosarcoma, malignancy can never be completed excluded preoperatively.
Removal of a 7.4-kg uterus
Our patient was a 44-year-old with a markedly enlarged fibroid uterus. Having been told by other providers that she was not a candidate for minimally invasive hysterectomy, she had delayed surgical management for a number of years, allowing for such a generous uterine size to develop.
The patient was knowledgeable about her condition and, given her comorbid obesity, she requested a minimally invasive approach. Preoperative imaging included an ultrasound, which had to be completed abdominally because of the size of her uterus, and an additional MRI was needed to further characterize the extent and nature of her uterus. A very detailed discussion regarding risk of leiomyosarcoma, operative complications, and conversion to laparotomy ensued.
Intraoperatively, we placed the first 5 mm port in the left upper quadrant initially to survey the anatomy for feasibility of laparoscopic hysterectomy. The left utero-ovarian pedicle was easily viewed by airplaning the bed alone. While the right utero-ovarian pedicle was much more skewed and enlarged, the right IP was easily accessible and the ureter well visualized.
The decision was made to place additional ports and proceed with laparoscopic hysterectomy. The 5-mm assistant ports were placed lateral and directly above the upper vascular pedicles. Operative time was 4 hours and 12 minutes, and blood loss was only 700 cc. Her preoperative hemoglobin was optimized at 13.3 g/dL and dropped to 11.3 g/dL postoperatively. The patient was discharged home the next morning and had a normal recovery with no complications.
Dr. Pasic is professor of obstetrics, gynecology & women’s health; director of the section of advanced gynecologic endoscopy; and codirector of the AAGL fellowship in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery at the University of Louisville (Ky.). Dr. Pasic is the current president of the International Society of Gynecologic Endoscopy. He is also a past president of the AAGL (2009). Dr. Cesta is Dr. Pasic’s current fellow in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery as well as an instructor in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Louisville. Dr. Pasic disclosed he is a consultant for Ethicon Endo, Medtronic, and Olympus and is a speaker for Cooper Surgical, which manufactures some of the instruments mentioned in this article. Dr. Cesta had no relevant financial disclosures.
It has now been 30 years since the first total laparoscopic hysterectomy was performed. The benefits of minimally invasive gynecologic surgery (MIGS) – and of minimally invasive hysterectomy specifically – are now well documented. Since this milestone procedure, both instrumentation and technique have improved significantly.
These latter two factors – a very large uterus (which we define as more than 15-16 weeks’ gestational size) and a BMI over 60 kg/m2 – historically were considered to be contraindications to laparoscopic hysterectomy. But as the proficiency, comfort, and skill of a new generation of laparoscopic surgeons increases, the tide is shifting with respect to both morbid obesity and the very large uterus.
With growing experience and improved instrumentation, the majority of gynecologists who are fellowship-trained in MIGS are able to routinely and safely perform laparoscopic hysterectomy for uteri weighing 1-2 kg and in patients who have extreme morbid obesity. The literature, moreover, increasingly features case reports of laparoscopic removal of very large uteri and reviews/discussions of total laparoscopic hysterectomy being feasible.
In our own experience, total laparoscopic hysterectomy (TLH) of the very large uterus can be safely and advantageously performed using key instruments and refinements in technique, as well as thorough patient counseling regarding the risk of unexpected sarcomas. Recently, we safely performed total laparoscopic hysterectomy for a patient with a uterus that – somewhat unexpectedly – weighed 7.4 kg.
Surgical pearls
Performing safe and effective total laparoscopic hysterectomy for large uteri – and for morbidly obese patients – hinges largely on modifications in entry and port placement, patient positioning, and choice of instrumentation. With these modifications, we can achieve adequate visualization of critical anatomy and can minimize bleeding. Otherwise, the surgery itself is largely the same. Here are the principles we find most helpful.
Entry and port placement
Traditionally, for TLHs, a camera port is placed at the umbilicus to provide a full view of the pelvis. For the larger uterus – and in women who are extremely obese – we aim to introduce the laparoscope higher. A reliable landmark is the Palmer’s point in the left upper quadrant. From here, we can identify areas for the placement of additional trocars.
In general, we place ancillary 5-mm ports more cephalad and lateral to the uterus than we otherwise would. Such placement facilitates effective visualization while accommodating manipulation of the uterus and allows us to avoid bleeding around the vascular upper pedicles. Overall, we have much better control through all parts of the surgery when we operate lateral to the uterus.
Patient positioning
In addition to the Trendelenburg position, we have adopted an “airplaning” technique for patients with a very large uterus in which the bed is tilted from side to side so that the left and right sides of the body are rotated upward as needed. This allows for gravitational-assisted retraction when it otherwise is not possible.
Instrumentation
For morbidly obese patients, we use Kii Fios advanced fixation trocars. These come in 5- and 10-mm sizes and are equipped with an intraperitoneal balloon that can be inflated to prevent sliding of the trocar out of the abdominal wall.
By far the most valuable instrument for the morbidly obese and the very large uterus is a 30-degree laparoscope. With our higher port placement as described, the 30-degree scope provides visualization of critical structures that wouldn’t be possible with a 0-degree scope.
The Rumi uterine manipulator comes with cups that come in different sizes and can fit around the cervix and help delineate the cervicouterine junction. We use this manipulator for all laparoscopic hysterectomies, but it is a must for the very large uterus.
Extensive desiccation of the utero-ovarian pedicles and uterine arteries is critical, and for this we advise using the rotating bipolar RoBi instrument. Use of the conventional bipolar instrument allows us to use targeted and anatomically guided application of energy. This ensures certainty that vessels whose limits exceed the diameter for advanced bipolar devices (typically 7 mm) are completely sealed. In-depth knowledge of pelvic anatomy and advanced laparoscopic dissection is paramount during these steps to ensure that vital structures are not damaged by the wider thermal spread of the traditional bipolar device. For cutting, the use of ultrasonic energy is important to prevent energy from spreading laterally.
Lastly, we recommend a good suction irrigator because, if bleeding occurs, it tends to be heavy because of the enlarged nature of feeding vasculature. When placed through an umbilical or suprapubic port, the suction irrigator also may be used to help with the rotational vectors and traction for further uterine manipulation.
Technique
We usually operate from top to bottom, transecting the upper pedicles such as the infundibulopelvic (IP) ligaments or utero-ovarian ligaments first, rather than the round ligaments. This helps us achieve additional mobility of the uterus. Some surgeons believe that retroperitoneal dissection and ligation of the uterine arteries at their origin is essential, but we find that, with good uterine manipulation and the use of a 30-degree scope, we achieve adequate visualization for identifying the ureter and uterine artery on the sidewall and consequently do not need to dissect retroperitoneally.
When using the uterine manipulator with the colpotomy cup, the uterus is pushed upward, increasing the distance between the vaginal fornix and the ureters. Uterine arteries can easily be identified and desiccated using conventional bipolar energy. When the colpotomy cup is pushed cephalad, the application of the bipolar energy within the limits of the cup is safe. The thermal spread does not pose a threat to the ureters, which are displaced 1.5-2 cm laterally. Large fibroids often contribute to distorted anatomical planes, and a colpotomy cup provides a firm palpable surface between the cervix and vagina during dissection.
When dealing with large uteri, one must sometimes think outside the box and deviate from standard technique. For instance, in patients with distorted anatomy because of large fibroids, it helps to first control the pedicles that are most easily accessible. Sometimes it is acceptable to perform oophorectomy if the IP ligament is more accessible and the utero-ovarian pedicle is distorted by dilated veins and adherent to the uterus. After transection of each pedicle, we gain more mobility of the uterus and better visualization for the next step.
Inserting the camera through ancillary ports – a technique known as “port hopping” – helps to visualize and take down adhesions much better and more safely than using the camera from the umbilical port only. Port hopping with a 30-degree laparoscope helps to obtain a 360-degree view of adhesions and anatomy, which is exceedingly helpful in cases in which crucial anatomical structures are within close proximity of one another.
In general it is more challenging to perform TLH on a patient with a broad uterus or a patient with low posterior fibroids that are occupying the pelvis than on a patient with fibroids in the upper abdomen. The main challenge for the surgeon is to safely secure the uterine arteries and control the blood supply to the uterus.
Access to the pelvic sidewall is obtained with the combination of 30-degree scope, uterine manipulator, and the suction irrigator introduced through the midline port; the cervix and uterus are deviated upward. Instead of the suction irrigator or blunt dissector used for internal uterine manipulation, some surgeons use myoma screws or a 5-mm single-tooth tenaculum to manipulate a large uterus. Both of those instruments are valuable and work well, but often a large uterus requires extensive manipulation. Repositioning of any sharp instruments that pierce the serosa can often lead to additional blood loss. It is preferable to avoid this blood loss on a large uterus at all costs because it can be brisk and stains the surgical pedicles, making the remainder of the procedure unnecessarily difficult.
Once the uterine arteries are desiccated, if fibroids are obscuring the view, the corpus of the uterus can be detached from the cervix as in supracervical hysterectomy fashion. From there, the uterus can be placed in the upper abdomen while colpotomy can be performed.
In patients with multiple fibroids, we do not recommend performing myomectomy first, unless the fibroid is pedunculated and on a very small stalk. Improved uterine manipulation and retroperitoneal dissection are preferred over myomectomy to safely complete hysterectomy for the broad uterus. In our opinion, any attempt at myomectomy would lead to unnecessary blood loss and additional operative time with minimal benefit.
In patients with fibroids that grow into the broad ligament and pelvic sidewall, the natural course of the ureter becomes displaced laterally. This is contrary to the popular misconception that the ureter is more medially located in the setting of broad-ligament fibroids. To ensure safe access to the uterine arteries, the vesicouterine peritoneum can be incised and extended cephalad along the broad ligament and, then, using the above-mentioned technique, by pushing the uterus and the fibroid to the contralateral side via the suction irrigator, the uterine arteries can be easily accessed.
Another useful technique is to use diluted vasopressin injected into the lower pole of the uterus to cause vasoconstriction and minimize the bleeding. The concentration is 1 cc of 20 units of vasopressin in 100-400 cc of saline. This technique is very useful for myomectomies, and some surgeons find it also helpful for hysterectomy. The plasma half-life of vasopressin is 10-20 minutes, and a large quantity is needed to help with vasoconstriction in a big uterus. The safe upper limits of vasopressin dosing are not firmly established. A fibroid uterus with aberrant vasculature may require a greater-than-acceptable dose to control bleeding.
It is important to ensure that patients have an optimized hemoglobin level preoperatively. We use a hemoglobin level of 8 g/dL as a lowest cutoff value for performing TLH without preoperative transfusion. Regarding bowel preparation, neither the literature nor our own experience support its value, so we typically do not use it.
Morcellation and patient counseling
Uteri up to 12 weeks’ gestational size usually can be extracted transvaginally, and most uteri regardless of size can be morcellated and extracted through the vagina, providing that the vaginal fornix is accessible from below. In some cases, such as when the apex is too high, a minilaparotomic incision is needed to extract the uterus, or when available, power morcellation can be performed.
A major challenge, given our growing ability to laparoscopically remove very larger uteri, is that uteri heavier than about 2.5 kg in weight cannot be morcellated inside a morcellation bag. The risk of upstaging a known or suspected uterine malignancy, or of spreading an unknown malignant sarcoma (presumed benign myoma), should be incorporated in each patient’s decision making.
Thorough counseling about surgical options and on the risks of morcellating a very large uterus without containment in a bag is essential. Each patient must understand the risks and decide whether the benefits of minimally invasive surgery outweigh these risks. While MRI can sometimes provide increased suspicion of a leiomyosarcoma, malignancy can never be completed excluded preoperatively.
Removal of a 7.4-kg uterus
Our patient was a 44-year-old with a markedly enlarged fibroid uterus. Having been told by other providers that she was not a candidate for minimally invasive hysterectomy, she had delayed surgical management for a number of years, allowing for such a generous uterine size to develop.
The patient was knowledgeable about her condition and, given her comorbid obesity, she requested a minimally invasive approach. Preoperative imaging included an ultrasound, which had to be completed abdominally because of the size of her uterus, and an additional MRI was needed to further characterize the extent and nature of her uterus. A very detailed discussion regarding risk of leiomyosarcoma, operative complications, and conversion to laparotomy ensued.
Intraoperatively, we placed the first 5 mm port in the left upper quadrant initially to survey the anatomy for feasibility of laparoscopic hysterectomy. The left utero-ovarian pedicle was easily viewed by airplaning the bed alone. While the right utero-ovarian pedicle was much more skewed and enlarged, the right IP was easily accessible and the ureter well visualized.
The decision was made to place additional ports and proceed with laparoscopic hysterectomy. The 5-mm assistant ports were placed lateral and directly above the upper vascular pedicles. Operative time was 4 hours and 12 minutes, and blood loss was only 700 cc. Her preoperative hemoglobin was optimized at 13.3 g/dL and dropped to 11.3 g/dL postoperatively. The patient was discharged home the next morning and had a normal recovery with no complications.
Dr. Pasic is professor of obstetrics, gynecology & women’s health; director of the section of advanced gynecologic endoscopy; and codirector of the AAGL fellowship in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery at the University of Louisville (Ky.). Dr. Pasic is the current president of the International Society of Gynecologic Endoscopy. He is also a past president of the AAGL (2009). Dr. Cesta is Dr. Pasic’s current fellow in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery as well as an instructor in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Louisville. Dr. Pasic disclosed he is a consultant for Ethicon Endo, Medtronic, and Olympus and is a speaker for Cooper Surgical, which manufactures some of the instruments mentioned in this article. Dr. Cesta had no relevant financial disclosures.
It has now been 30 years since the first total laparoscopic hysterectomy was performed. The benefits of minimally invasive gynecologic surgery (MIGS) – and of minimally invasive hysterectomy specifically – are now well documented. Since this milestone procedure, both instrumentation and technique have improved significantly.
These latter two factors – a very large uterus (which we define as more than 15-16 weeks’ gestational size) and a BMI over 60 kg/m2 – historically were considered to be contraindications to laparoscopic hysterectomy. But as the proficiency, comfort, and skill of a new generation of laparoscopic surgeons increases, the tide is shifting with respect to both morbid obesity and the very large uterus.
With growing experience and improved instrumentation, the majority of gynecologists who are fellowship-trained in MIGS are able to routinely and safely perform laparoscopic hysterectomy for uteri weighing 1-2 kg and in patients who have extreme morbid obesity. The literature, moreover, increasingly features case reports of laparoscopic removal of very large uteri and reviews/discussions of total laparoscopic hysterectomy being feasible.
In our own experience, total laparoscopic hysterectomy (TLH) of the very large uterus can be safely and advantageously performed using key instruments and refinements in technique, as well as thorough patient counseling regarding the risk of unexpected sarcomas. Recently, we safely performed total laparoscopic hysterectomy for a patient with a uterus that – somewhat unexpectedly – weighed 7.4 kg.
Surgical pearls
Performing safe and effective total laparoscopic hysterectomy for large uteri – and for morbidly obese patients – hinges largely on modifications in entry and port placement, patient positioning, and choice of instrumentation. With these modifications, we can achieve adequate visualization of critical anatomy and can minimize bleeding. Otherwise, the surgery itself is largely the same. Here are the principles we find most helpful.
Entry and port placement
Traditionally, for TLHs, a camera port is placed at the umbilicus to provide a full view of the pelvis. For the larger uterus – and in women who are extremely obese – we aim to introduce the laparoscope higher. A reliable landmark is the Palmer’s point in the left upper quadrant. From here, we can identify areas for the placement of additional trocars.
In general, we place ancillary 5-mm ports more cephalad and lateral to the uterus than we otherwise would. Such placement facilitates effective visualization while accommodating manipulation of the uterus and allows us to avoid bleeding around the vascular upper pedicles. Overall, we have much better control through all parts of the surgery when we operate lateral to the uterus.
Patient positioning
In addition to the Trendelenburg position, we have adopted an “airplaning” technique for patients with a very large uterus in which the bed is tilted from side to side so that the left and right sides of the body are rotated upward as needed. This allows for gravitational-assisted retraction when it otherwise is not possible.
Instrumentation
For morbidly obese patients, we use Kii Fios advanced fixation trocars. These come in 5- and 10-mm sizes and are equipped with an intraperitoneal balloon that can be inflated to prevent sliding of the trocar out of the abdominal wall.
By far the most valuable instrument for the morbidly obese and the very large uterus is a 30-degree laparoscope. With our higher port placement as described, the 30-degree scope provides visualization of critical structures that wouldn’t be possible with a 0-degree scope.
The Rumi uterine manipulator comes with cups that come in different sizes and can fit around the cervix and help delineate the cervicouterine junction. We use this manipulator for all laparoscopic hysterectomies, but it is a must for the very large uterus.
Extensive desiccation of the utero-ovarian pedicles and uterine arteries is critical, and for this we advise using the rotating bipolar RoBi instrument. Use of the conventional bipolar instrument allows us to use targeted and anatomically guided application of energy. This ensures certainty that vessels whose limits exceed the diameter for advanced bipolar devices (typically 7 mm) are completely sealed. In-depth knowledge of pelvic anatomy and advanced laparoscopic dissection is paramount during these steps to ensure that vital structures are not damaged by the wider thermal spread of the traditional bipolar device. For cutting, the use of ultrasonic energy is important to prevent energy from spreading laterally.
Lastly, we recommend a good suction irrigator because, if bleeding occurs, it tends to be heavy because of the enlarged nature of feeding vasculature. When placed through an umbilical or suprapubic port, the suction irrigator also may be used to help with the rotational vectors and traction for further uterine manipulation.
Technique
We usually operate from top to bottom, transecting the upper pedicles such as the infundibulopelvic (IP) ligaments or utero-ovarian ligaments first, rather than the round ligaments. This helps us achieve additional mobility of the uterus. Some surgeons believe that retroperitoneal dissection and ligation of the uterine arteries at their origin is essential, but we find that, with good uterine manipulation and the use of a 30-degree scope, we achieve adequate visualization for identifying the ureter and uterine artery on the sidewall and consequently do not need to dissect retroperitoneally.
When using the uterine manipulator with the colpotomy cup, the uterus is pushed upward, increasing the distance between the vaginal fornix and the ureters. Uterine arteries can easily be identified and desiccated using conventional bipolar energy. When the colpotomy cup is pushed cephalad, the application of the bipolar energy within the limits of the cup is safe. The thermal spread does not pose a threat to the ureters, which are displaced 1.5-2 cm laterally. Large fibroids often contribute to distorted anatomical planes, and a colpotomy cup provides a firm palpable surface between the cervix and vagina during dissection.
When dealing with large uteri, one must sometimes think outside the box and deviate from standard technique. For instance, in patients with distorted anatomy because of large fibroids, it helps to first control the pedicles that are most easily accessible. Sometimes it is acceptable to perform oophorectomy if the IP ligament is more accessible and the utero-ovarian pedicle is distorted by dilated veins and adherent to the uterus. After transection of each pedicle, we gain more mobility of the uterus and better visualization for the next step.
Inserting the camera through ancillary ports – a technique known as “port hopping” – helps to visualize and take down adhesions much better and more safely than using the camera from the umbilical port only. Port hopping with a 30-degree laparoscope helps to obtain a 360-degree view of adhesions and anatomy, which is exceedingly helpful in cases in which crucial anatomical structures are within close proximity of one another.
In general it is more challenging to perform TLH on a patient with a broad uterus or a patient with low posterior fibroids that are occupying the pelvis than on a patient with fibroids in the upper abdomen. The main challenge for the surgeon is to safely secure the uterine arteries and control the blood supply to the uterus.
Access to the pelvic sidewall is obtained with the combination of 30-degree scope, uterine manipulator, and the suction irrigator introduced through the midline port; the cervix and uterus are deviated upward. Instead of the suction irrigator or blunt dissector used for internal uterine manipulation, some surgeons use myoma screws or a 5-mm single-tooth tenaculum to manipulate a large uterus. Both of those instruments are valuable and work well, but often a large uterus requires extensive manipulation. Repositioning of any sharp instruments that pierce the serosa can often lead to additional blood loss. It is preferable to avoid this blood loss on a large uterus at all costs because it can be brisk and stains the surgical pedicles, making the remainder of the procedure unnecessarily difficult.
Once the uterine arteries are desiccated, if fibroids are obscuring the view, the corpus of the uterus can be detached from the cervix as in supracervical hysterectomy fashion. From there, the uterus can be placed in the upper abdomen while colpotomy can be performed.
In patients with multiple fibroids, we do not recommend performing myomectomy first, unless the fibroid is pedunculated and on a very small stalk. Improved uterine manipulation and retroperitoneal dissection are preferred over myomectomy to safely complete hysterectomy for the broad uterus. In our opinion, any attempt at myomectomy would lead to unnecessary blood loss and additional operative time with minimal benefit.
In patients with fibroids that grow into the broad ligament and pelvic sidewall, the natural course of the ureter becomes displaced laterally. This is contrary to the popular misconception that the ureter is more medially located in the setting of broad-ligament fibroids. To ensure safe access to the uterine arteries, the vesicouterine peritoneum can be incised and extended cephalad along the broad ligament and, then, using the above-mentioned technique, by pushing the uterus and the fibroid to the contralateral side via the suction irrigator, the uterine arteries can be easily accessed.
Another useful technique is to use diluted vasopressin injected into the lower pole of the uterus to cause vasoconstriction and minimize the bleeding. The concentration is 1 cc of 20 units of vasopressin in 100-400 cc of saline. This technique is very useful for myomectomies, and some surgeons find it also helpful for hysterectomy. The plasma half-life of vasopressin is 10-20 minutes, and a large quantity is needed to help with vasoconstriction in a big uterus. The safe upper limits of vasopressin dosing are not firmly established. A fibroid uterus with aberrant vasculature may require a greater-than-acceptable dose to control bleeding.
It is important to ensure that patients have an optimized hemoglobin level preoperatively. We use a hemoglobin level of 8 g/dL as a lowest cutoff value for performing TLH without preoperative transfusion. Regarding bowel preparation, neither the literature nor our own experience support its value, so we typically do not use it.
Morcellation and patient counseling
Uteri up to 12 weeks’ gestational size usually can be extracted transvaginally, and most uteri regardless of size can be morcellated and extracted through the vagina, providing that the vaginal fornix is accessible from below. In some cases, such as when the apex is too high, a minilaparotomic incision is needed to extract the uterus, or when available, power morcellation can be performed.
A major challenge, given our growing ability to laparoscopically remove very larger uteri, is that uteri heavier than about 2.5 kg in weight cannot be morcellated inside a morcellation bag. The risk of upstaging a known or suspected uterine malignancy, or of spreading an unknown malignant sarcoma (presumed benign myoma), should be incorporated in each patient’s decision making.
Thorough counseling about surgical options and on the risks of morcellating a very large uterus without containment in a bag is essential. Each patient must understand the risks and decide whether the benefits of minimally invasive surgery outweigh these risks. While MRI can sometimes provide increased suspicion of a leiomyosarcoma, malignancy can never be completed excluded preoperatively.
Removal of a 7.4-kg uterus
Our patient was a 44-year-old with a markedly enlarged fibroid uterus. Having been told by other providers that she was not a candidate for minimally invasive hysterectomy, she had delayed surgical management for a number of years, allowing for such a generous uterine size to develop.
The patient was knowledgeable about her condition and, given her comorbid obesity, she requested a minimally invasive approach. Preoperative imaging included an ultrasound, which had to be completed abdominally because of the size of her uterus, and an additional MRI was needed to further characterize the extent and nature of her uterus. A very detailed discussion regarding risk of leiomyosarcoma, operative complications, and conversion to laparotomy ensued.
Intraoperatively, we placed the first 5 mm port in the left upper quadrant initially to survey the anatomy for feasibility of laparoscopic hysterectomy. The left utero-ovarian pedicle was easily viewed by airplaning the bed alone. While the right utero-ovarian pedicle was much more skewed and enlarged, the right IP was easily accessible and the ureter well visualized.
The decision was made to place additional ports and proceed with laparoscopic hysterectomy. The 5-mm assistant ports were placed lateral and directly above the upper vascular pedicles. Operative time was 4 hours and 12 minutes, and blood loss was only 700 cc. Her preoperative hemoglobin was optimized at 13.3 g/dL and dropped to 11.3 g/dL postoperatively. The patient was discharged home the next morning and had a normal recovery with no complications.
Dr. Pasic is professor of obstetrics, gynecology & women’s health; director of the section of advanced gynecologic endoscopy; and codirector of the AAGL fellowship in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery at the University of Louisville (Ky.). Dr. Pasic is the current president of the International Society of Gynecologic Endoscopy. He is also a past president of the AAGL (2009). Dr. Cesta is Dr. Pasic’s current fellow in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery as well as an instructor in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Louisville. Dr. Pasic disclosed he is a consultant for Ethicon Endo, Medtronic, and Olympus and is a speaker for Cooper Surgical, which manufactures some of the instruments mentioned in this article. Dr. Cesta had no relevant financial disclosures.