Researchers examine learning curve for gender-affirming vaginoplasty

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Tue, 09/15/2020 - 16:43

Patient outcomes after gender-affirming vaginoplasty may improve as surgeons gain experience with the procedure, research suggests. For one surgeon, certain adverse events, including the need for revision surgery, were less likely after 50 cases.

Dr. Cecile A. Ferrando, program director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at Cleveland Clinic and director of the transgender surgery and medicine program in the Cleveland Clinic Center for LGBT Care
Dr. Cecile A. Ferrando

“As surgical programs evolve, the important question becomes: At what case threshold are cases performed safely, efficiently, and with favorable outcomes?” said Cecile A. Ferrando, MD, MPH, program director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at Cleveland Clinic and director of the transgender surgery and medicine program in the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for LGBT Care.

The answer could guide training for future surgeons, Dr. Ferrando said at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Future studies should include patient-centered outcomes and data from multiple centers, other doctors said.

Transgender women who opt to surgically transition may undergo vaginoplasty. Although many reports describe surgical techniques, “there is a paucity of evidence-based data as well as few reports on outcomes,” Dr. Ferrando noted.

To describe perioperative adverse events related to vaginoplasty performed for gender affirmation and determine a minimum number of cases needed to reduce their likelihood, Dr. Ferrando performed a retrospective study of 76 patients. The patients underwent surgery between December 2015 and March 2019 and had 6-month postoperative outcomes available. Dr. Ferrando performed the procedures.

Dr. Ferrando evaluated outcomes after increments of 10 cases. After 50 cases, the median surgical time decreased to approximately 180 minutes, which an informal survey of surgeons suggested was efficient, and the rates of adverse events were similar to those in other studies. Dr. Ferrando compared outcomes from the first 50 cases with outcomes from the 26 cases that followed.

Overall, the patients had a mean age of 41 years. The first 50 patients were older on average (44 years vs. 35 years). About 83% underwent full-depth vaginoplasty. The incidence of intraoperative and immediate postoperative events was low and did not differ between the two groups. Rates of delayed postoperative events – those occurring 30 or more days after surgery – did significantly differ between the two groups, however.

After 50 cases, there was a lower incidence of urinary stream abnormalities (7.7% vs. 16.3%), introital stenosis (3.9% vs. 12%), and revision surgery (that is, elective, cosmetic, or functional revision within 6 months; 19.2% vs. 44%), compared with the first 50 cases.

The study did not include patient-centered outcomes and the results may have limited generalizability, Dr. Ferrando noted. “The incidence of serious adverse events related to vaginoplasty is low while minor events are common,” she said. “A 50-case minimum may be an adequate case number target for postgraduate trainees learning how to do this surgery.”

“I learned that the incidence of serious complications, like injuries during the surgery, or serious events immediately after surgery was quite low, which was reassuring,” Dr. Ferrando said in a later interview. “The cosmetic result and detail that is involved with the surgery – something that is very important to patients – that skill set takes time and experience to refine.”

Subsequent studies should include patient-centered outcomes, which may help surgeons understand potential “sources of consternation for patients,” such as persistent corporal tissue, poor aesthetics, vaginal stenosis, urinary meatus location, and clitoral hooding, Joseph J. Pariser, MD, commented in an interview. Dr. Pariser, a urologist who specializes in gender care at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, in 2019 reviewed safety outcomes from published case series.

“In my own practice, precise placement of the urethra, familiarity with landmarks during canal dissection, and rapidity of working through steps of the surgery have all dramatically improved as our experience at University of Minnesota performing primary vaginoplasty has grown,” Dr. Pariser said.

Optimal case thresholds may vary depending on a surgeon’s background, Rachel M. Whynott, MD, a reproductive endocrinology and infertility fellow at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, said in an interview. At the University of Kansas in Kansas City, a multidisciplinary team that includes a gynecologist, a reconstructive urologist, and a plastic surgeon performs the procedure.

Dr. Whynott and colleagues recently published a retrospective study that evaluated surgical aptitude over time in a male-to-female penoscrotal vaginoplasty program . Their analysis of 43 cases identified a learning curve that was reflected in overall time in the operating room and time to neoclitoral sensation.

Investigators are “trying to add to the growing body of literature about this procedure and how we can best go about improving outcomes for our patients and improving this surgery,” Dr. Whynott said. A study that includes data from multiple centers would be useful, she added.

Dr. Ferrando disclosed authorship royalties from UpToDate. Dr. Pariser and Dr. Whynott had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Ferrando C. SGS 2020, Abstract 09.

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Patient outcomes after gender-affirming vaginoplasty may improve as surgeons gain experience with the procedure, research suggests. For one surgeon, certain adverse events, including the need for revision surgery, were less likely after 50 cases.

Dr. Cecile A. Ferrando, program director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at Cleveland Clinic and director of the transgender surgery and medicine program in the Cleveland Clinic Center for LGBT Care
Dr. Cecile A. Ferrando

“As surgical programs evolve, the important question becomes: At what case threshold are cases performed safely, efficiently, and with favorable outcomes?” said Cecile A. Ferrando, MD, MPH, program director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at Cleveland Clinic and director of the transgender surgery and medicine program in the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for LGBT Care.

The answer could guide training for future surgeons, Dr. Ferrando said at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Future studies should include patient-centered outcomes and data from multiple centers, other doctors said.

Transgender women who opt to surgically transition may undergo vaginoplasty. Although many reports describe surgical techniques, “there is a paucity of evidence-based data as well as few reports on outcomes,” Dr. Ferrando noted.

To describe perioperative adverse events related to vaginoplasty performed for gender affirmation and determine a minimum number of cases needed to reduce their likelihood, Dr. Ferrando performed a retrospective study of 76 patients. The patients underwent surgery between December 2015 and March 2019 and had 6-month postoperative outcomes available. Dr. Ferrando performed the procedures.

Dr. Ferrando evaluated outcomes after increments of 10 cases. After 50 cases, the median surgical time decreased to approximately 180 minutes, which an informal survey of surgeons suggested was efficient, and the rates of adverse events were similar to those in other studies. Dr. Ferrando compared outcomes from the first 50 cases with outcomes from the 26 cases that followed.

Overall, the patients had a mean age of 41 years. The first 50 patients were older on average (44 years vs. 35 years). About 83% underwent full-depth vaginoplasty. The incidence of intraoperative and immediate postoperative events was low and did not differ between the two groups. Rates of delayed postoperative events – those occurring 30 or more days after surgery – did significantly differ between the two groups, however.

After 50 cases, there was a lower incidence of urinary stream abnormalities (7.7% vs. 16.3%), introital stenosis (3.9% vs. 12%), and revision surgery (that is, elective, cosmetic, or functional revision within 6 months; 19.2% vs. 44%), compared with the first 50 cases.

The study did not include patient-centered outcomes and the results may have limited generalizability, Dr. Ferrando noted. “The incidence of serious adverse events related to vaginoplasty is low while minor events are common,” she said. “A 50-case minimum may be an adequate case number target for postgraduate trainees learning how to do this surgery.”

“I learned that the incidence of serious complications, like injuries during the surgery, or serious events immediately after surgery was quite low, which was reassuring,” Dr. Ferrando said in a later interview. “The cosmetic result and detail that is involved with the surgery – something that is very important to patients – that skill set takes time and experience to refine.”

Subsequent studies should include patient-centered outcomes, which may help surgeons understand potential “sources of consternation for patients,” such as persistent corporal tissue, poor aesthetics, vaginal stenosis, urinary meatus location, and clitoral hooding, Joseph J. Pariser, MD, commented in an interview. Dr. Pariser, a urologist who specializes in gender care at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, in 2019 reviewed safety outcomes from published case series.

“In my own practice, precise placement of the urethra, familiarity with landmarks during canal dissection, and rapidity of working through steps of the surgery have all dramatically improved as our experience at University of Minnesota performing primary vaginoplasty has grown,” Dr. Pariser said.

Optimal case thresholds may vary depending on a surgeon’s background, Rachel M. Whynott, MD, a reproductive endocrinology and infertility fellow at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, said in an interview. At the University of Kansas in Kansas City, a multidisciplinary team that includes a gynecologist, a reconstructive urologist, and a plastic surgeon performs the procedure.

Dr. Whynott and colleagues recently published a retrospective study that evaluated surgical aptitude over time in a male-to-female penoscrotal vaginoplasty program . Their analysis of 43 cases identified a learning curve that was reflected in overall time in the operating room and time to neoclitoral sensation.

Investigators are “trying to add to the growing body of literature about this procedure and how we can best go about improving outcomes for our patients and improving this surgery,” Dr. Whynott said. A study that includes data from multiple centers would be useful, she added.

Dr. Ferrando disclosed authorship royalties from UpToDate. Dr. Pariser and Dr. Whynott had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Ferrando C. SGS 2020, Abstract 09.

Patient outcomes after gender-affirming vaginoplasty may improve as surgeons gain experience with the procedure, research suggests. For one surgeon, certain adverse events, including the need for revision surgery, were less likely after 50 cases.

Dr. Cecile A. Ferrando, program director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at Cleveland Clinic and director of the transgender surgery and medicine program in the Cleveland Clinic Center for LGBT Care
Dr. Cecile A. Ferrando

“As surgical programs evolve, the important question becomes: At what case threshold are cases performed safely, efficiently, and with favorable outcomes?” said Cecile A. Ferrando, MD, MPH, program director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at Cleveland Clinic and director of the transgender surgery and medicine program in the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for LGBT Care.

The answer could guide training for future surgeons, Dr. Ferrando said at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Future studies should include patient-centered outcomes and data from multiple centers, other doctors said.

Transgender women who opt to surgically transition may undergo vaginoplasty. Although many reports describe surgical techniques, “there is a paucity of evidence-based data as well as few reports on outcomes,” Dr. Ferrando noted.

To describe perioperative adverse events related to vaginoplasty performed for gender affirmation and determine a minimum number of cases needed to reduce their likelihood, Dr. Ferrando performed a retrospective study of 76 patients. The patients underwent surgery between December 2015 and March 2019 and had 6-month postoperative outcomes available. Dr. Ferrando performed the procedures.

Dr. Ferrando evaluated outcomes after increments of 10 cases. After 50 cases, the median surgical time decreased to approximately 180 minutes, which an informal survey of surgeons suggested was efficient, and the rates of adverse events were similar to those in other studies. Dr. Ferrando compared outcomes from the first 50 cases with outcomes from the 26 cases that followed.

Overall, the patients had a mean age of 41 years. The first 50 patients were older on average (44 years vs. 35 years). About 83% underwent full-depth vaginoplasty. The incidence of intraoperative and immediate postoperative events was low and did not differ between the two groups. Rates of delayed postoperative events – those occurring 30 or more days after surgery – did significantly differ between the two groups, however.

After 50 cases, there was a lower incidence of urinary stream abnormalities (7.7% vs. 16.3%), introital stenosis (3.9% vs. 12%), and revision surgery (that is, elective, cosmetic, or functional revision within 6 months; 19.2% vs. 44%), compared with the first 50 cases.

The study did not include patient-centered outcomes and the results may have limited generalizability, Dr. Ferrando noted. “The incidence of serious adverse events related to vaginoplasty is low while minor events are common,” she said. “A 50-case minimum may be an adequate case number target for postgraduate trainees learning how to do this surgery.”

“I learned that the incidence of serious complications, like injuries during the surgery, or serious events immediately after surgery was quite low, which was reassuring,” Dr. Ferrando said in a later interview. “The cosmetic result and detail that is involved with the surgery – something that is very important to patients – that skill set takes time and experience to refine.”

Subsequent studies should include patient-centered outcomes, which may help surgeons understand potential “sources of consternation for patients,” such as persistent corporal tissue, poor aesthetics, vaginal stenosis, urinary meatus location, and clitoral hooding, Joseph J. Pariser, MD, commented in an interview. Dr. Pariser, a urologist who specializes in gender care at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, in 2019 reviewed safety outcomes from published case series.

“In my own practice, precise placement of the urethra, familiarity with landmarks during canal dissection, and rapidity of working through steps of the surgery have all dramatically improved as our experience at University of Minnesota performing primary vaginoplasty has grown,” Dr. Pariser said.

Optimal case thresholds may vary depending on a surgeon’s background, Rachel M. Whynott, MD, a reproductive endocrinology and infertility fellow at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, said in an interview. At the University of Kansas in Kansas City, a multidisciplinary team that includes a gynecologist, a reconstructive urologist, and a plastic surgeon performs the procedure.

Dr. Whynott and colleagues recently published a retrospective study that evaluated surgical aptitude over time in a male-to-female penoscrotal vaginoplasty program . Their analysis of 43 cases identified a learning curve that was reflected in overall time in the operating room and time to neoclitoral sensation.

Investigators are “trying to add to the growing body of literature about this procedure and how we can best go about improving outcomes for our patients and improving this surgery,” Dr. Whynott said. A study that includes data from multiple centers would be useful, she added.

Dr. Ferrando disclosed authorship royalties from UpToDate. Dr. Pariser and Dr. Whynott had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Ferrando C. SGS 2020, Abstract 09.

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Patients may prefer retrograde-fill voiding trials after pelvic floor surgery

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Thu, 09/03/2020 - 09:22

Voiding trials after female pelvic floor surgery may detect similar rates of voiding dysfunction regardless of whether voiding occurs spontaneously or after the bladder is retrograde-filled with saline, according to a randomized study.

Dr. Patrick Popiel of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut
Dr. Patrick Popiel

Nevertheless, patients may prefer the more common retrograde-fill approach.

In the study of 109 patients, those who underwent retrograde fill reported significantly greater satisfaction with their method of voiding evaluation, compared with patients whose voiding trials occurred spontaneously. The increased satisfaction could relate to the fact that retrograde-fill trials take less time, study investigator Patrick Popiel, MD, of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., suggested at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. The exact reasons are unclear, however.

Voiding trials help identify patients who cannot sufficiently empty their bladder after surgery. Prior research has indicated that the incidence of voiding dysfunction after pelvic floor surgery is about 25%-35%. “Patients with voiding dysfunction are generally managed with an indwelling Foley catheter or clean intermittent self-catheterization,” Dr. Popiel said. “Catheterization increases the risk of urinary tract infection, increases anxiety, and decreases patient satisfaction. A large proportion of patients who are discharged home with a Foley catheter state that the catheter was the worst aspect of their experience.”

Dr. Popiel and colleagues conducted a randomized, prospective study to examine the rate of failed voiding trials that necessitate discharge home with an indwelling Foley catheter using spontaneous and retrograde-fill approaches. The study included women who required a voiding trial after surgery for pelvic organ prolapse or urinary incontinence. Patients who required prolonged catheterization after surgery, such as those with a urinary tract infection, bowel injury, or large amount of blood loss, were excluded.

Researchers analyzed data from 55 patients who were randomly assigned to the retrograde-fill group and 54 patients who were randomly assigned to the spontaneous trial group.

In the spontaneous group, patients were required to void at least 150 mL at one time within 6 hours of catheter removal to successfully complete the voiding trial.

In the retrograde-fill group, the bladder was filled in the postanesthesia care unit with 300 mL of saline or until the maximum volume tolerated by the patient (not exceeding 300 mL ) was reached. Patients in this group had to void at least 150 mL or 50% of the instilled volume at one time within 60 minutes of catheter removal to pass the trial.

The researchers documented postvoid residual (PVR) but did not use this measure to determine voiding function.

The baseline demographics of the two groups were similar, although prior hysterectomy was more common in the retrograde-fill group than in the spontaneous group (32.7% vs. 14.8%). The average age was 58.5 years in the retrograde-fill group and 61 years in the spontaneous group.

“There was no significant difference in our primary outcome,” Dr. Popiel said. “There was a 12.7% rate of failed voiding trial in the retrograde group versus 7.7% in the spontaneous group.”

No patients had urinary retention after initially passing their voiding trial. Force of stream did not differ between groups, and about 15% in each group had a postoperative urinary tract infection.

The study demonstrates that voiding assessment based on a spontaneous minimum void of 150 mL is safe and has similar pass rates, compared with the more commonly performed retrograde void trial, Dr. Popiel said. “If the voided amount is at least 150 mL, PVR is not critical to obtain. The study adds to the body of literature that supports less stringent criteria for evaluating voiding function and can limit postoperative urinary recatheterization.”

The investigators allowed patients with PVRs as high as 575 mL to return home without an alternative way to empty the bladder, C. Sage Claydon, MD, a urogynecologist who was not involved in the study, noted during a discussion after the presentation. In all, 6 patients who met the passing criteria for the spontaneous voiding trial had a PVR greater than 200 mL, with volumes ranging from 205-575 mL.

The patients received standardized counseling about postoperative voiding problems, said Dr. Popiel. “This is similar to the work done by Ingber et al. from 2011, where patients who reached a certain force of stream, greater than 5 out of 10, were discharged home regardless of PVR.”

Dr. Popiel had no relevant disclosures. Two coinvestigators disclosed ties to BlossomMed, Renovia, and ArmadaHealth.

SOURCE: Popiel P et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 14.

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Voiding trials after female pelvic floor surgery may detect similar rates of voiding dysfunction regardless of whether voiding occurs spontaneously or after the bladder is retrograde-filled with saline, according to a randomized study.

Dr. Patrick Popiel of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut
Dr. Patrick Popiel

Nevertheless, patients may prefer the more common retrograde-fill approach.

In the study of 109 patients, those who underwent retrograde fill reported significantly greater satisfaction with their method of voiding evaluation, compared with patients whose voiding trials occurred spontaneously. The increased satisfaction could relate to the fact that retrograde-fill trials take less time, study investigator Patrick Popiel, MD, of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., suggested at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. The exact reasons are unclear, however.

Voiding trials help identify patients who cannot sufficiently empty their bladder after surgery. Prior research has indicated that the incidence of voiding dysfunction after pelvic floor surgery is about 25%-35%. “Patients with voiding dysfunction are generally managed with an indwelling Foley catheter or clean intermittent self-catheterization,” Dr. Popiel said. “Catheterization increases the risk of urinary tract infection, increases anxiety, and decreases patient satisfaction. A large proportion of patients who are discharged home with a Foley catheter state that the catheter was the worst aspect of their experience.”

Dr. Popiel and colleagues conducted a randomized, prospective study to examine the rate of failed voiding trials that necessitate discharge home with an indwelling Foley catheter using spontaneous and retrograde-fill approaches. The study included women who required a voiding trial after surgery for pelvic organ prolapse or urinary incontinence. Patients who required prolonged catheterization after surgery, such as those with a urinary tract infection, bowel injury, or large amount of blood loss, were excluded.

Researchers analyzed data from 55 patients who were randomly assigned to the retrograde-fill group and 54 patients who were randomly assigned to the spontaneous trial group.

In the spontaneous group, patients were required to void at least 150 mL at one time within 6 hours of catheter removal to successfully complete the voiding trial.

In the retrograde-fill group, the bladder was filled in the postanesthesia care unit with 300 mL of saline or until the maximum volume tolerated by the patient (not exceeding 300 mL ) was reached. Patients in this group had to void at least 150 mL or 50% of the instilled volume at one time within 60 minutes of catheter removal to pass the trial.

The researchers documented postvoid residual (PVR) but did not use this measure to determine voiding function.

The baseline demographics of the two groups were similar, although prior hysterectomy was more common in the retrograde-fill group than in the spontaneous group (32.7% vs. 14.8%). The average age was 58.5 years in the retrograde-fill group and 61 years in the spontaneous group.

“There was no significant difference in our primary outcome,” Dr. Popiel said. “There was a 12.7% rate of failed voiding trial in the retrograde group versus 7.7% in the spontaneous group.”

No patients had urinary retention after initially passing their voiding trial. Force of stream did not differ between groups, and about 15% in each group had a postoperative urinary tract infection.

The study demonstrates that voiding assessment based on a spontaneous minimum void of 150 mL is safe and has similar pass rates, compared with the more commonly performed retrograde void trial, Dr. Popiel said. “If the voided amount is at least 150 mL, PVR is not critical to obtain. The study adds to the body of literature that supports less stringent criteria for evaluating voiding function and can limit postoperative urinary recatheterization.”

The investigators allowed patients with PVRs as high as 575 mL to return home without an alternative way to empty the bladder, C. Sage Claydon, MD, a urogynecologist who was not involved in the study, noted during a discussion after the presentation. In all, 6 patients who met the passing criteria for the spontaneous voiding trial had a PVR greater than 200 mL, with volumes ranging from 205-575 mL.

The patients received standardized counseling about postoperative voiding problems, said Dr. Popiel. “This is similar to the work done by Ingber et al. from 2011, where patients who reached a certain force of stream, greater than 5 out of 10, were discharged home regardless of PVR.”

Dr. Popiel had no relevant disclosures. Two coinvestigators disclosed ties to BlossomMed, Renovia, and ArmadaHealth.

SOURCE: Popiel P et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 14.

Voiding trials after female pelvic floor surgery may detect similar rates of voiding dysfunction regardless of whether voiding occurs spontaneously or after the bladder is retrograde-filled with saline, according to a randomized study.

Dr. Patrick Popiel of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut
Dr. Patrick Popiel

Nevertheless, patients may prefer the more common retrograde-fill approach.

In the study of 109 patients, those who underwent retrograde fill reported significantly greater satisfaction with their method of voiding evaluation, compared with patients whose voiding trials occurred spontaneously. The increased satisfaction could relate to the fact that retrograde-fill trials take less time, study investigator Patrick Popiel, MD, of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., suggested at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. The exact reasons are unclear, however.

Voiding trials help identify patients who cannot sufficiently empty their bladder after surgery. Prior research has indicated that the incidence of voiding dysfunction after pelvic floor surgery is about 25%-35%. “Patients with voiding dysfunction are generally managed with an indwelling Foley catheter or clean intermittent self-catheterization,” Dr. Popiel said. “Catheterization increases the risk of urinary tract infection, increases anxiety, and decreases patient satisfaction. A large proportion of patients who are discharged home with a Foley catheter state that the catheter was the worst aspect of their experience.”

Dr. Popiel and colleagues conducted a randomized, prospective study to examine the rate of failed voiding trials that necessitate discharge home with an indwelling Foley catheter using spontaneous and retrograde-fill approaches. The study included women who required a voiding trial after surgery for pelvic organ prolapse or urinary incontinence. Patients who required prolonged catheterization after surgery, such as those with a urinary tract infection, bowel injury, or large amount of blood loss, were excluded.

Researchers analyzed data from 55 patients who were randomly assigned to the retrograde-fill group and 54 patients who were randomly assigned to the spontaneous trial group.

In the spontaneous group, patients were required to void at least 150 mL at one time within 6 hours of catheter removal to successfully complete the voiding trial.

In the retrograde-fill group, the bladder was filled in the postanesthesia care unit with 300 mL of saline or until the maximum volume tolerated by the patient (not exceeding 300 mL ) was reached. Patients in this group had to void at least 150 mL or 50% of the instilled volume at one time within 60 minutes of catheter removal to pass the trial.

The researchers documented postvoid residual (PVR) but did not use this measure to determine voiding function.

The baseline demographics of the two groups were similar, although prior hysterectomy was more common in the retrograde-fill group than in the spontaneous group (32.7% vs. 14.8%). The average age was 58.5 years in the retrograde-fill group and 61 years in the spontaneous group.

“There was no significant difference in our primary outcome,” Dr. Popiel said. “There was a 12.7% rate of failed voiding trial in the retrograde group versus 7.7% in the spontaneous group.”

No patients had urinary retention after initially passing their voiding trial. Force of stream did not differ between groups, and about 15% in each group had a postoperative urinary tract infection.

The study demonstrates that voiding assessment based on a spontaneous minimum void of 150 mL is safe and has similar pass rates, compared with the more commonly performed retrograde void trial, Dr. Popiel said. “If the voided amount is at least 150 mL, PVR is not critical to obtain. The study adds to the body of literature that supports less stringent criteria for evaluating voiding function and can limit postoperative urinary recatheterization.”

The investigators allowed patients with PVRs as high as 575 mL to return home without an alternative way to empty the bladder, C. Sage Claydon, MD, a urogynecologist who was not involved in the study, noted during a discussion after the presentation. In all, 6 patients who met the passing criteria for the spontaneous voiding trial had a PVR greater than 200 mL, with volumes ranging from 205-575 mL.

The patients received standardized counseling about postoperative voiding problems, said Dr. Popiel. “This is similar to the work done by Ingber et al. from 2011, where patients who reached a certain force of stream, greater than 5 out of 10, were discharged home regardless of PVR.”

Dr. Popiel had no relevant disclosures. Two coinvestigators disclosed ties to BlossomMed, Renovia, and ArmadaHealth.

SOURCE: Popiel P et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 14.

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Appendix may be common site of endometriosis

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Thu, 08/06/2020 - 15:03

Among women who have a coincidental appendectomy during surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis, about 15% have appendiceal endometriosis confirmed by pathological examination, according to a study.

Dr. Whitney T. Ross of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Health in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Whitney T. Ross

“In the women with appendiceal endometriosis, only 26% had an appendix that looked abnormal,” said Whitney T. Ross, MD, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Health, Hershey.

The results, presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, indicate that “appendiceal endometriosis is common in women receiving surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis,” she said. “This study and multiple other studies have also demonstrated that coincidental appendectomy is safe.”

The long-term impact of coincidental appendectomy and its effect on quality of life are not known, however, which may make it difficult to weigh the costs and benefits of the procedure, Dr. Ross said. “It is important to talk to patients about this procedure and determine which approach is the right approach for your institution.”

The study of 609 coincidental appendectomies did not include patients with retrocecal appendices, which may confound the true rate of appendiceal endometriosis, commented Saifuddin T. Mama, MD, MPH, of Rowan University, Camden, N.J.

When the investigators started the study, they were not sure of the risks and benefits of the procedure in patients with retrocecal appendices. An anecdotal report from another research group suggests that outcomes with retrocecal appendices may not be significantly different. “But that is certainly an important question and one that we would like to address in a future prospective study,” Dr. Ross said.

Surgeons have debated the role of coincidental appendectomy during gynecologic surgery. Concerns about safety and questions about the prevalence of appendiceal pathology are reasons that coincidental appendectomy has not been more widely adopted. On the other hand, the procedure may benefit patients and aid diagnosis.

To evaluate the role of coincidental appendectomy in the surgical excision of endometriosis, Dr. Ross and colleagues analyzed data from consecutive coincidental appendectomies performed at one institution between 2013 and 2019. They identified cases in a prospectively maintained surgical database to assess safety and the prevalence of appendiceal pathology.

abdominal pain woman with stomachache
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The indication for surgery was chronic pelvic pain but no visualized endometriosis for 42 patients, stage I-II endometriosis for 388 patients, and stage III-IV endometriosis for 179 patients.

Surgeries included laparoscopic hysterectomy (77.5%), operative laparoscopy (19.9%), and laparoscopic trachelectomy (2.6%). Pathological analysis of the appendices identified endometriosis in 14.9%, malignancy in 0.7%, polyps in 0.5%, and appendicitis in 0.3%.

Among women with chronic pelvic pain but no visualized endometriosis, 2.4% had appendiceal endometriosis. Among those with stage I-II endometriosis, 7% had appendiceal endometriosis, and in patients with stage III-IV endometriosis, the rate of appendiceal endometriosis was 35.2%.

In about 6% of patients with appendiceal endometriosis, the appendix was the only site of pathologically confirmed endometriosis.

Compared with chronic pelvic pain, stage III-IV endometriosis was associated with a significantly increased risk of appendiceal endometriosis (odds ratio, 22.2). The likelihood of appendiceal endometriosis also increased when the appendix looked abnormal (odds ratio, 6.5).

The probability of diagnosing appendiceal endometriosis also increases with the number of other locations of confirmed endometriosis.

“Our surgical decision making is based off of intraoperative findings. However, the final gold-standard diagnosis can’t take place until the pathologic specimen is analyzed,” she said. “We also know that there is a significant discordance, as high as 50%, in early-stage endometriosis between visual inspection and pathology findings.”

There were no complications related to the performance of a coincidental appendectomy during surgery or in the 12 weeks after.

Dr. Ross outlined surgeons’ three main options for performing coincidental appendectomy in patients undergoing surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis: universal coincidental appendectomy, targeted appendectomy based on operative findings, and performing the procedure based on the appearance of the appendix.

Basing the decision on appearance “is going to miss a lot of appendiceal endometriosis,” Dr. Ross said. In the present study, 67 of the 91 cases, about 74%, would have been missed.

Dr. Ross and Dr. Mama had no relevant financial disclosures. The study coauthors disclosed ties to Titan Medical, Merck, and AbbVie.

SOURCE: Ross WT et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 14.

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Among women who have a coincidental appendectomy during surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis, about 15% have appendiceal endometriosis confirmed by pathological examination, according to a study.

Dr. Whitney T. Ross of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Health in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Whitney T. Ross

“In the women with appendiceal endometriosis, only 26% had an appendix that looked abnormal,” said Whitney T. Ross, MD, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Health, Hershey.

The results, presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, indicate that “appendiceal endometriosis is common in women receiving surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis,” she said. “This study and multiple other studies have also demonstrated that coincidental appendectomy is safe.”

The long-term impact of coincidental appendectomy and its effect on quality of life are not known, however, which may make it difficult to weigh the costs and benefits of the procedure, Dr. Ross said. “It is important to talk to patients about this procedure and determine which approach is the right approach for your institution.”

The study of 609 coincidental appendectomies did not include patients with retrocecal appendices, which may confound the true rate of appendiceal endometriosis, commented Saifuddin T. Mama, MD, MPH, of Rowan University, Camden, N.J.

When the investigators started the study, they were not sure of the risks and benefits of the procedure in patients with retrocecal appendices. An anecdotal report from another research group suggests that outcomes with retrocecal appendices may not be significantly different. “But that is certainly an important question and one that we would like to address in a future prospective study,” Dr. Ross said.

Surgeons have debated the role of coincidental appendectomy during gynecologic surgery. Concerns about safety and questions about the prevalence of appendiceal pathology are reasons that coincidental appendectomy has not been more widely adopted. On the other hand, the procedure may benefit patients and aid diagnosis.

To evaluate the role of coincidental appendectomy in the surgical excision of endometriosis, Dr. Ross and colleagues analyzed data from consecutive coincidental appendectomies performed at one institution between 2013 and 2019. They identified cases in a prospectively maintained surgical database to assess safety and the prevalence of appendiceal pathology.

abdominal pain woman with stomachache
iStockphoto.com

The indication for surgery was chronic pelvic pain but no visualized endometriosis for 42 patients, stage I-II endometriosis for 388 patients, and stage III-IV endometriosis for 179 patients.

Surgeries included laparoscopic hysterectomy (77.5%), operative laparoscopy (19.9%), and laparoscopic trachelectomy (2.6%). Pathological analysis of the appendices identified endometriosis in 14.9%, malignancy in 0.7%, polyps in 0.5%, and appendicitis in 0.3%.

Among women with chronic pelvic pain but no visualized endometriosis, 2.4% had appendiceal endometriosis. Among those with stage I-II endometriosis, 7% had appendiceal endometriosis, and in patients with stage III-IV endometriosis, the rate of appendiceal endometriosis was 35.2%.

In about 6% of patients with appendiceal endometriosis, the appendix was the only site of pathologically confirmed endometriosis.

Compared with chronic pelvic pain, stage III-IV endometriosis was associated with a significantly increased risk of appendiceal endometriosis (odds ratio, 22.2). The likelihood of appendiceal endometriosis also increased when the appendix looked abnormal (odds ratio, 6.5).

The probability of diagnosing appendiceal endometriosis also increases with the number of other locations of confirmed endometriosis.

“Our surgical decision making is based off of intraoperative findings. However, the final gold-standard diagnosis can’t take place until the pathologic specimen is analyzed,” she said. “We also know that there is a significant discordance, as high as 50%, in early-stage endometriosis between visual inspection and pathology findings.”

There were no complications related to the performance of a coincidental appendectomy during surgery or in the 12 weeks after.

Dr. Ross outlined surgeons’ three main options for performing coincidental appendectomy in patients undergoing surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis: universal coincidental appendectomy, targeted appendectomy based on operative findings, and performing the procedure based on the appearance of the appendix.

Basing the decision on appearance “is going to miss a lot of appendiceal endometriosis,” Dr. Ross said. In the present study, 67 of the 91 cases, about 74%, would have been missed.

Dr. Ross and Dr. Mama had no relevant financial disclosures. The study coauthors disclosed ties to Titan Medical, Merck, and AbbVie.

SOURCE: Ross WT et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 14.

Among women who have a coincidental appendectomy during surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis, about 15% have appendiceal endometriosis confirmed by pathological examination, according to a study.

Dr. Whitney T. Ross of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Health in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Whitney T. Ross

“In the women with appendiceal endometriosis, only 26% had an appendix that looked abnormal,” said Whitney T. Ross, MD, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Health, Hershey.

The results, presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, indicate that “appendiceal endometriosis is common in women receiving surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis,” she said. “This study and multiple other studies have also demonstrated that coincidental appendectomy is safe.”

The long-term impact of coincidental appendectomy and its effect on quality of life are not known, however, which may make it difficult to weigh the costs and benefits of the procedure, Dr. Ross said. “It is important to talk to patients about this procedure and determine which approach is the right approach for your institution.”

The study of 609 coincidental appendectomies did not include patients with retrocecal appendices, which may confound the true rate of appendiceal endometriosis, commented Saifuddin T. Mama, MD, MPH, of Rowan University, Camden, N.J.

When the investigators started the study, they were not sure of the risks and benefits of the procedure in patients with retrocecal appendices. An anecdotal report from another research group suggests that outcomes with retrocecal appendices may not be significantly different. “But that is certainly an important question and one that we would like to address in a future prospective study,” Dr. Ross said.

Surgeons have debated the role of coincidental appendectomy during gynecologic surgery. Concerns about safety and questions about the prevalence of appendiceal pathology are reasons that coincidental appendectomy has not been more widely adopted. On the other hand, the procedure may benefit patients and aid diagnosis.

To evaluate the role of coincidental appendectomy in the surgical excision of endometriosis, Dr. Ross and colleagues analyzed data from consecutive coincidental appendectomies performed at one institution between 2013 and 2019. They identified cases in a prospectively maintained surgical database to assess safety and the prevalence of appendiceal pathology.

abdominal pain woman with stomachache
iStockphoto.com

The indication for surgery was chronic pelvic pain but no visualized endometriosis for 42 patients, stage I-II endometriosis for 388 patients, and stage III-IV endometriosis for 179 patients.

Surgeries included laparoscopic hysterectomy (77.5%), operative laparoscopy (19.9%), and laparoscopic trachelectomy (2.6%). Pathological analysis of the appendices identified endometriosis in 14.9%, malignancy in 0.7%, polyps in 0.5%, and appendicitis in 0.3%.

Among women with chronic pelvic pain but no visualized endometriosis, 2.4% had appendiceal endometriosis. Among those with stage I-II endometriosis, 7% had appendiceal endometriosis, and in patients with stage III-IV endometriosis, the rate of appendiceal endometriosis was 35.2%.

In about 6% of patients with appendiceal endometriosis, the appendix was the only site of pathologically confirmed endometriosis.

Compared with chronic pelvic pain, stage III-IV endometriosis was associated with a significantly increased risk of appendiceal endometriosis (odds ratio, 22.2). The likelihood of appendiceal endometriosis also increased when the appendix looked abnormal (odds ratio, 6.5).

The probability of diagnosing appendiceal endometriosis also increases with the number of other locations of confirmed endometriosis.

“Our surgical decision making is based off of intraoperative findings. However, the final gold-standard diagnosis can’t take place until the pathologic specimen is analyzed,” she said. “We also know that there is a significant discordance, as high as 50%, in early-stage endometriosis between visual inspection and pathology findings.”

There were no complications related to the performance of a coincidental appendectomy during surgery or in the 12 weeks after.

Dr. Ross outlined surgeons’ three main options for performing coincidental appendectomy in patients undergoing surgery for chronic pelvic pain or endometriosis: universal coincidental appendectomy, targeted appendectomy based on operative findings, and performing the procedure based on the appearance of the appendix.

Basing the decision on appearance “is going to miss a lot of appendiceal endometriosis,” Dr. Ross said. In the present study, 67 of the 91 cases, about 74%, would have been missed.

Dr. Ross and Dr. Mama had no relevant financial disclosures. The study coauthors disclosed ties to Titan Medical, Merck, and AbbVie.

SOURCE: Ross WT et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 14.

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How often does risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy identify cancer?

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Wed, 08/05/2020 - 09:28

Among women with BRCA mutations who underwent risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, the procedure led to a cancer diagnosis in 3%, according to research presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Team of doctors performing surgery on a patient at hospital.
HRAUN/Getty Images

Of 269 patients, 8 (3%) received a cancer diagnosis. In five cases, the cancer was diagnosed on final pathology, and three had immediate conversion to staging.

The data suggest that gynecologists as well as gynecologic oncologists may perform the procedure, but gynecologists may be less likely to obtain pelvic washings in accordance with guidelines for this indication.

“It may not be necessary for oncologists alone to be performing risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomies given that the overall incidence of cancer is low,” said study author Coralee Toal, MD, of UPMC Magee-Womans Hospital in Pittsburgh. “It is often a diagnosis that is found at the time of pathology, so the initial procedure would not have been changed either way.”

Still, doctors who perform the procedure should follow recommended practices such as obtaining pelvic washings and identifying patients for the procedure within target age ranges, Dr. Toal said.

BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations confer an increased risk of ovarian and breast cancer, but there is no effective form of ovarian cancer screening. Women with a known mutation may have a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy to reduce the risk of cancer. The recommended age range for the procedure is 35-40 years for women with BRCA1 mutations and 40-45 years for women with BRCA2 mutations.

When the procedure is performed for this indication, various recommendations apply that may differ from those when the procedure is performed under different circumstances.

During risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, the surgeon should thoroughly evaluate the abdominal cavity, obtain pelvic washings for cytology, remove at least 2 cm of the infundibulopelvic ligament, and divide the fallopian tube at the uterine cornua.

To assess the incidence of occult ovarian cancer at the time of risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and surgeon adherence to recommended practices, Dr. Toal and colleagues performed a retrospective chart review.

They included patients who had a known BRCA mutation and underwent a risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy between July 2007 and September 2018. They excluded patients who had a suspicious adnexal mass before the procedure but not a known diagnosis, as well as patients with another malignancy or genetic syndrome.

The researchers evaluated adherence to recommendations by reviewing operative reports.

In all, they reviewed data from 269 patients. In 220 cases, a gynecologic oncologist performed the procedure, and in 49 cases a gynecologist performed the procedure.

Patients tended to be older than would be expected, said Dr. Toal. Patients with BRCA1 mutations had an average age of 46 years, and patients with BRCA2 mutations had an average age of 49 years.

Patients who received a cancer diagnosis were significantly older on average, compared with the other patients: 58 years versus 48 years.

Pelvic washings were performed during 95% of the procedures performed by a gynecologic oncologist, compared with 63% of the procedures performed by a gynecologist. In addition, patients who had the procedure performed by a gynecologist were significantly older than those who had the procedure performed by a gynecologic oncologist (49 vs. 47 years).

Miles Murphy, MD, president of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, asked how doctors should weigh the possibility of risk-reducing oophorectomy at the time of benign hysterectomy in patients without a family history of female cancer.

It could be that genetic testing would be appropriate for some of those patients, Dr. Toal said. It is “important to take a thorough family history to make sure that you are identifying anybody who may benefit from genetic counseling and genetic testing, where you might identify an otherwise not known mutation prior to an otherwise benign or routine surgery,” Dr. Toal said. “Then you would have the opportunity to perform this.”

For patients without known mutations, however, “we do know the benefit of ovaries remaining in situ ... including cardiac health,” she said. “You have to remember that people can die of a broken hip as well. The risk of osteoporosis and those things is not zero and in fact may be much higher than their ovarian cancer risk.”

One of the study authors is a surgeon educator for Covidien and Medtronic.

SOURCE: Newcomb LK et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 18.

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Among women with BRCA mutations who underwent risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, the procedure led to a cancer diagnosis in 3%, according to research presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Team of doctors performing surgery on a patient at hospital.
HRAUN/Getty Images

Of 269 patients, 8 (3%) received a cancer diagnosis. In five cases, the cancer was diagnosed on final pathology, and three had immediate conversion to staging.

The data suggest that gynecologists as well as gynecologic oncologists may perform the procedure, but gynecologists may be less likely to obtain pelvic washings in accordance with guidelines for this indication.

“It may not be necessary for oncologists alone to be performing risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomies given that the overall incidence of cancer is low,” said study author Coralee Toal, MD, of UPMC Magee-Womans Hospital in Pittsburgh. “It is often a diagnosis that is found at the time of pathology, so the initial procedure would not have been changed either way.”

Still, doctors who perform the procedure should follow recommended practices such as obtaining pelvic washings and identifying patients for the procedure within target age ranges, Dr. Toal said.

BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations confer an increased risk of ovarian and breast cancer, but there is no effective form of ovarian cancer screening. Women with a known mutation may have a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy to reduce the risk of cancer. The recommended age range for the procedure is 35-40 years for women with BRCA1 mutations and 40-45 years for women with BRCA2 mutations.

When the procedure is performed for this indication, various recommendations apply that may differ from those when the procedure is performed under different circumstances.

During risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, the surgeon should thoroughly evaluate the abdominal cavity, obtain pelvic washings for cytology, remove at least 2 cm of the infundibulopelvic ligament, and divide the fallopian tube at the uterine cornua.

To assess the incidence of occult ovarian cancer at the time of risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and surgeon adherence to recommended practices, Dr. Toal and colleagues performed a retrospective chart review.

They included patients who had a known BRCA mutation and underwent a risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy between July 2007 and September 2018. They excluded patients who had a suspicious adnexal mass before the procedure but not a known diagnosis, as well as patients with another malignancy or genetic syndrome.

The researchers evaluated adherence to recommendations by reviewing operative reports.

In all, they reviewed data from 269 patients. In 220 cases, a gynecologic oncologist performed the procedure, and in 49 cases a gynecologist performed the procedure.

Patients tended to be older than would be expected, said Dr. Toal. Patients with BRCA1 mutations had an average age of 46 years, and patients with BRCA2 mutations had an average age of 49 years.

Patients who received a cancer diagnosis were significantly older on average, compared with the other patients: 58 years versus 48 years.

Pelvic washings were performed during 95% of the procedures performed by a gynecologic oncologist, compared with 63% of the procedures performed by a gynecologist. In addition, patients who had the procedure performed by a gynecologist were significantly older than those who had the procedure performed by a gynecologic oncologist (49 vs. 47 years).

Miles Murphy, MD, president of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, asked how doctors should weigh the possibility of risk-reducing oophorectomy at the time of benign hysterectomy in patients without a family history of female cancer.

It could be that genetic testing would be appropriate for some of those patients, Dr. Toal said. It is “important to take a thorough family history to make sure that you are identifying anybody who may benefit from genetic counseling and genetic testing, where you might identify an otherwise not known mutation prior to an otherwise benign or routine surgery,” Dr. Toal said. “Then you would have the opportunity to perform this.”

For patients without known mutations, however, “we do know the benefit of ovaries remaining in situ ... including cardiac health,” she said. “You have to remember that people can die of a broken hip as well. The risk of osteoporosis and those things is not zero and in fact may be much higher than their ovarian cancer risk.”

One of the study authors is a surgeon educator for Covidien and Medtronic.

SOURCE: Newcomb LK et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 18.

Among women with BRCA mutations who underwent risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, the procedure led to a cancer diagnosis in 3%, according to research presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Team of doctors performing surgery on a patient at hospital.
HRAUN/Getty Images

Of 269 patients, 8 (3%) received a cancer diagnosis. In five cases, the cancer was diagnosed on final pathology, and three had immediate conversion to staging.

The data suggest that gynecologists as well as gynecologic oncologists may perform the procedure, but gynecologists may be less likely to obtain pelvic washings in accordance with guidelines for this indication.

“It may not be necessary for oncologists alone to be performing risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomies given that the overall incidence of cancer is low,” said study author Coralee Toal, MD, of UPMC Magee-Womans Hospital in Pittsburgh. “It is often a diagnosis that is found at the time of pathology, so the initial procedure would not have been changed either way.”

Still, doctors who perform the procedure should follow recommended practices such as obtaining pelvic washings and identifying patients for the procedure within target age ranges, Dr. Toal said.

BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations confer an increased risk of ovarian and breast cancer, but there is no effective form of ovarian cancer screening. Women with a known mutation may have a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy to reduce the risk of cancer. The recommended age range for the procedure is 35-40 years for women with BRCA1 mutations and 40-45 years for women with BRCA2 mutations.

When the procedure is performed for this indication, various recommendations apply that may differ from those when the procedure is performed under different circumstances.

During risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, the surgeon should thoroughly evaluate the abdominal cavity, obtain pelvic washings for cytology, remove at least 2 cm of the infundibulopelvic ligament, and divide the fallopian tube at the uterine cornua.

To assess the incidence of occult ovarian cancer at the time of risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and surgeon adherence to recommended practices, Dr. Toal and colleagues performed a retrospective chart review.

They included patients who had a known BRCA mutation and underwent a risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy between July 2007 and September 2018. They excluded patients who had a suspicious adnexal mass before the procedure but not a known diagnosis, as well as patients with another malignancy or genetic syndrome.

The researchers evaluated adherence to recommendations by reviewing operative reports.

In all, they reviewed data from 269 patients. In 220 cases, a gynecologic oncologist performed the procedure, and in 49 cases a gynecologist performed the procedure.

Patients tended to be older than would be expected, said Dr. Toal. Patients with BRCA1 mutations had an average age of 46 years, and patients with BRCA2 mutations had an average age of 49 years.

Patients who received a cancer diagnosis were significantly older on average, compared with the other patients: 58 years versus 48 years.

Pelvic washings were performed during 95% of the procedures performed by a gynecologic oncologist, compared with 63% of the procedures performed by a gynecologist. In addition, patients who had the procedure performed by a gynecologist were significantly older than those who had the procedure performed by a gynecologic oncologist (49 vs. 47 years).

Miles Murphy, MD, president of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, asked how doctors should weigh the possibility of risk-reducing oophorectomy at the time of benign hysterectomy in patients without a family history of female cancer.

It could be that genetic testing would be appropriate for some of those patients, Dr. Toal said. It is “important to take a thorough family history to make sure that you are identifying anybody who may benefit from genetic counseling and genetic testing, where you might identify an otherwise not known mutation prior to an otherwise benign or routine surgery,” Dr. Toal said. “Then you would have the opportunity to perform this.”

For patients without known mutations, however, “we do know the benefit of ovaries remaining in situ ... including cardiac health,” she said. “You have to remember that people can die of a broken hip as well. The risk of osteoporosis and those things is not zero and in fact may be much higher than their ovarian cancer risk.”

One of the study authors is a surgeon educator for Covidien and Medtronic.

SOURCE: Newcomb LK et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 18.

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Range of interventions reduces likelihood of infection after hysterectomy

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Changed
Fri, 07/31/2020 - 12:03

Improving hand hygiene, optimizing antibiotic order sets, and removing catheters sooner were among the interventions associated with a decreased risk of infections after hysterectomy, according to research presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Woman washing her hands with soap
rclassenlayouts/Getty Images

“Implementation of bundled interventions and an institutional focus on reducing infection can successfully reduce the burden of posthysterectomy infectious morbidity,” said study author Shitanshu Uppal, MBBS, an ob.gyn. specializing in gynecologic oncology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

To assess the impact of quality improvement efforts on infectious morbidity after hysterectomy, Dr. Uppal and colleagues analyzed data from 1,867 hysterectomies performed between Oct. 8, 2015, and Oct. 7, 2018. Patients were at least 18 years old, younger than 90 years old, and underwent hysterectomy via any route at the University of Michigan Medical Center Hospital.

Interventions to reduce infections included the use of cefazolin as a preferred antibiotic, the addition of metronidazole to first-generation cephalosporins for antibiotic prophylaxis, subcuticular closure of open incisions, and earlier removal of Foley catheters. In addition, the institution evaluated and shared information about doctors’ hand hygiene, implemented enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols, and held periodic meetings with doctors to discuss efforts to reduce infections. Most interventions were implemented by November 2017.

The primary outcome was overall infection rate in the 30 days after surgery for each of the 3 years included the study. Infections included superficial surgical site infections, deep infections, Clostridium difficile infections, and urinary tract infections, among others.

Patients’ baseline clinical characteristics did not differ during the 3 years studied. Length of stay decreased, which may be attributed to increased use of ERAS protocols and institution of same-day discharge in laparoscopic cases, Dr. Uppal said. The rate of malignancy on final pathology decreased from 29% in year 1 to 23% in year 3. The rate of laparoscopic surgery increased from 55% to 64%.

Infectious morbidity rates decreased from 7% in year 1 (47 infections per 644 cases) to 4% in year 3 (22 infections per 616 cases).

“We saw a reduction in infection rate in all categories,” said Dr. Uppal. “However, the reduction in urinary tract infection as well as superficial surgical site infection was most pronounced.”

After adjustment for the route of surgery, body mass index, age, malignancy on final pathology, modality of surgery, and comorbidities, performance of hysterectomy in year 3 was independently predictive of lower rates of infectious morbidity by 56%.

In addition, the standardized incidence ratio for surgical site infection as reported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services decreased. In December 2016, Michigan Medicine’s ratio was 1.057. At the end of 2018, the projected ratio was 0.243.

The interventions started on different dates, and “we are unable to conclude, from all the implemented interventions, which one worked,” Dr. Uppal noted.

“I hope the elements from this quality improvement initiative will become the standard of care in order to benefit our patients,” said Amy Park, MD, section head of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery at Cleveland Clinic.

Dr. Amy Park, section head of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery at Cleveland Clinic
Dr. Amy Park


In addition, the study “pertains to one of CMS’s major programs to reduce and prevent health care-associated infections,” Dr. Park said at the virtual meeting. Several CMS quality indicators in 2020 relate to gynecologic surgery, including postoperative wound dehiscence rate, catheter-related UTI rate, and surgical site infection related to hysterectomy. The CMS will reduce hospital payments to institutions in the worst performing quartile for hospital-acquired infection scores by 1%.

Dr. Uppal advised that hospitals need four things to achieve similar results: a commitment from the team and leadership to reduce infections; patience; making it easy for doctors to implement the new interventions; and periodic feedback.

The process may be tedious but worth it in the end, he said.

Dr. Uppal disclosed salary support from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. A coauthor disclosed salary support from the company plus royalties from UpToDate. Dr. Park disclosed speaking for Allergan and royalties from UpToDate.

SOURCE: Uppal S et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 16.

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Improving hand hygiene, optimizing antibiotic order sets, and removing catheters sooner were among the interventions associated with a decreased risk of infections after hysterectomy, according to research presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Woman washing her hands with soap
rclassenlayouts/Getty Images

“Implementation of bundled interventions and an institutional focus on reducing infection can successfully reduce the burden of posthysterectomy infectious morbidity,” said study author Shitanshu Uppal, MBBS, an ob.gyn. specializing in gynecologic oncology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

To assess the impact of quality improvement efforts on infectious morbidity after hysterectomy, Dr. Uppal and colleagues analyzed data from 1,867 hysterectomies performed between Oct. 8, 2015, and Oct. 7, 2018. Patients were at least 18 years old, younger than 90 years old, and underwent hysterectomy via any route at the University of Michigan Medical Center Hospital.

Interventions to reduce infections included the use of cefazolin as a preferred antibiotic, the addition of metronidazole to first-generation cephalosporins for antibiotic prophylaxis, subcuticular closure of open incisions, and earlier removal of Foley catheters. In addition, the institution evaluated and shared information about doctors’ hand hygiene, implemented enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols, and held periodic meetings with doctors to discuss efforts to reduce infections. Most interventions were implemented by November 2017.

The primary outcome was overall infection rate in the 30 days after surgery for each of the 3 years included the study. Infections included superficial surgical site infections, deep infections, Clostridium difficile infections, and urinary tract infections, among others.

Patients’ baseline clinical characteristics did not differ during the 3 years studied. Length of stay decreased, which may be attributed to increased use of ERAS protocols and institution of same-day discharge in laparoscopic cases, Dr. Uppal said. The rate of malignancy on final pathology decreased from 29% in year 1 to 23% in year 3. The rate of laparoscopic surgery increased from 55% to 64%.

Infectious morbidity rates decreased from 7% in year 1 (47 infections per 644 cases) to 4% in year 3 (22 infections per 616 cases).

“We saw a reduction in infection rate in all categories,” said Dr. Uppal. “However, the reduction in urinary tract infection as well as superficial surgical site infection was most pronounced.”

After adjustment for the route of surgery, body mass index, age, malignancy on final pathology, modality of surgery, and comorbidities, performance of hysterectomy in year 3 was independently predictive of lower rates of infectious morbidity by 56%.

In addition, the standardized incidence ratio for surgical site infection as reported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services decreased. In December 2016, Michigan Medicine’s ratio was 1.057. At the end of 2018, the projected ratio was 0.243.

The interventions started on different dates, and “we are unable to conclude, from all the implemented interventions, which one worked,” Dr. Uppal noted.

“I hope the elements from this quality improvement initiative will become the standard of care in order to benefit our patients,” said Amy Park, MD, section head of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery at Cleveland Clinic.

Dr. Amy Park, section head of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery at Cleveland Clinic
Dr. Amy Park


In addition, the study “pertains to one of CMS’s major programs to reduce and prevent health care-associated infections,” Dr. Park said at the virtual meeting. Several CMS quality indicators in 2020 relate to gynecologic surgery, including postoperative wound dehiscence rate, catheter-related UTI rate, and surgical site infection related to hysterectomy. The CMS will reduce hospital payments to institutions in the worst performing quartile for hospital-acquired infection scores by 1%.

Dr. Uppal advised that hospitals need four things to achieve similar results: a commitment from the team and leadership to reduce infections; patience; making it easy for doctors to implement the new interventions; and periodic feedback.

The process may be tedious but worth it in the end, he said.

Dr. Uppal disclosed salary support from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. A coauthor disclosed salary support from the company plus royalties from UpToDate. Dr. Park disclosed speaking for Allergan and royalties from UpToDate.

SOURCE: Uppal S et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 16.

Improving hand hygiene, optimizing antibiotic order sets, and removing catheters sooner were among the interventions associated with a decreased risk of infections after hysterectomy, according to research presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Woman washing her hands with soap
rclassenlayouts/Getty Images

“Implementation of bundled interventions and an institutional focus on reducing infection can successfully reduce the burden of posthysterectomy infectious morbidity,” said study author Shitanshu Uppal, MBBS, an ob.gyn. specializing in gynecologic oncology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

To assess the impact of quality improvement efforts on infectious morbidity after hysterectomy, Dr. Uppal and colleagues analyzed data from 1,867 hysterectomies performed between Oct. 8, 2015, and Oct. 7, 2018. Patients were at least 18 years old, younger than 90 years old, and underwent hysterectomy via any route at the University of Michigan Medical Center Hospital.

Interventions to reduce infections included the use of cefazolin as a preferred antibiotic, the addition of metronidazole to first-generation cephalosporins for antibiotic prophylaxis, subcuticular closure of open incisions, and earlier removal of Foley catheters. In addition, the institution evaluated and shared information about doctors’ hand hygiene, implemented enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols, and held periodic meetings with doctors to discuss efforts to reduce infections. Most interventions were implemented by November 2017.

The primary outcome was overall infection rate in the 30 days after surgery for each of the 3 years included the study. Infections included superficial surgical site infections, deep infections, Clostridium difficile infections, and urinary tract infections, among others.

Patients’ baseline clinical characteristics did not differ during the 3 years studied. Length of stay decreased, which may be attributed to increased use of ERAS protocols and institution of same-day discharge in laparoscopic cases, Dr. Uppal said. The rate of malignancy on final pathology decreased from 29% in year 1 to 23% in year 3. The rate of laparoscopic surgery increased from 55% to 64%.

Infectious morbidity rates decreased from 7% in year 1 (47 infections per 644 cases) to 4% in year 3 (22 infections per 616 cases).

“We saw a reduction in infection rate in all categories,” said Dr. Uppal. “However, the reduction in urinary tract infection as well as superficial surgical site infection was most pronounced.”

After adjustment for the route of surgery, body mass index, age, malignancy on final pathology, modality of surgery, and comorbidities, performance of hysterectomy in year 3 was independently predictive of lower rates of infectious morbidity by 56%.

In addition, the standardized incidence ratio for surgical site infection as reported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services decreased. In December 2016, Michigan Medicine’s ratio was 1.057. At the end of 2018, the projected ratio was 0.243.

The interventions started on different dates, and “we are unable to conclude, from all the implemented interventions, which one worked,” Dr. Uppal noted.

“I hope the elements from this quality improvement initiative will become the standard of care in order to benefit our patients,” said Amy Park, MD, section head of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery at Cleveland Clinic.

Dr. Amy Park, section head of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery at Cleveland Clinic
Dr. Amy Park


In addition, the study “pertains to one of CMS’s major programs to reduce and prevent health care-associated infections,” Dr. Park said at the virtual meeting. Several CMS quality indicators in 2020 relate to gynecologic surgery, including postoperative wound dehiscence rate, catheter-related UTI rate, and surgical site infection related to hysterectomy. The CMS will reduce hospital payments to institutions in the worst performing quartile for hospital-acquired infection scores by 1%.

Dr. Uppal advised that hospitals need four things to achieve similar results: a commitment from the team and leadership to reduce infections; patience; making it easy for doctors to implement the new interventions; and periodic feedback.

The process may be tedious but worth it in the end, he said.

Dr. Uppal disclosed salary support from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. A coauthor disclosed salary support from the company plus royalties from UpToDate. Dr. Park disclosed speaking for Allergan and royalties from UpToDate.

SOURCE: Uppal S et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 16.

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Local analgesia before prolapse surgery may not be needed to reduce postop pain

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Tue, 07/28/2020 - 18:15

Preoperative pelvic floor muscle injections and pudendal nerve blocks with bupivacaine and dexamethasone do not significantly improve pain control after vaginal apical prolapse repair, compared with placebo, according to a study.

In a randomized trial, patients generally reported mild postoperative pain and low dosages of narcotic use. “The majority reported that they returned to their baseline activity by 2 weeks after surgery, which should be reassuring to similar urogynecology patient populations,” said Lauren Giugale, MD.

Although many gynecologic surgeries increasingly are performed as outpatient procedures, patients may have inadequate pain control and persistently use narcotics after surgery. In an effort to reduce postoperative pain, doctors have tried preemptive analgesia with various local anesthetic techniques. These approaches have had mixed results, however, and there is “no consensus on the ideal local anesthetic technique to reduce postoperative pain after vaginal reconstructive surgery,” said Dr. Giugale, of the University of Pittsburgh.

To evaluate whether preoperative pelvic floor muscle injections and pudendal nerve blocks with bupivacaine and dexamethasone improve postoperative pain control after vaginal apical prolapse repairs, Dr. Giugale and colleagues conducted a three-arm, double-blind trial that included 75 patients. Patients received placebo (normal saline), bupivacaine alone, or bupivacaine combined with 4 mg of dexamethasone at four injection sites.

Dr. Giugale presented the study results at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.



A range of procedures

Participants received bilateral levator ani muscle injections via a transobturator approach and pudendal nerve blocks via a transvaginal approach. They received the injections – 5 mL at each site – after the administration of general anesthesia but before the start of surgery. “Anecdotally, we have had good success” with the transobturator approach to treating chronic pelvic pain, which was part of the rationale for the trial, said Dr. Giugale.

The study included women 18 years or older who were scheduled for a vaginal native tissue repair with apical support. Participants had to be able to tolerate general anesthesia with a standardized enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol. The investigators excluded women undergoing mesh-augmented prolapse repairs or abdominal surgery and those with chronic pelvic pain or immunosuppression.

Each treatment arm had 25 patients. Patients had an average age of 69 years and an average body mass index of 27.5 kg/m2. Most patients were white, and demographic variables did not significantly differ among the groups.

“The distribution of prolapse procedures was similar among study groups, with colpocleisis being the most common, followed by uterosacral ligament suspension, levator myorrhaphy, and sacrospinous ligament fixation,” said Dr. Giugale. Rates of concomitant hysterectomy were similar for each group.

Before surgery, patients completed pain, nausea, and activities assessments. At 6 hours after surgery, they completed pain and nausea assessments. During postoperative days 1 through 3, patients documented pain scores and analgesic use. One week after surgery, patients completed pain and activities assessments. And at postoperative weeks 2, 6, and 12, they completed additional activities assessments. The assessments included validated handouts that patients completed at home, and no additional office visits were required.

The numeric rating scale pain score on the day after surgery was the primary outcome, and the median pain score did not significantly differ among the groups (3.75 in the placebo group, 4 in the bupivacaine group, and 3 in the bupivacaine plus dexamethasone group). Between-group differences in pain scores at other time points also were not significant.

Activities assessments, nausea and vomiting scores, the percentage of patients with same-day discharge, urinary retention, postoperative narcotic use as measured by oral morphine equivalents, and adverse events also did not significantly differ among the groups.

“One week after surgery, 52% of women reported that they were at or better than their baseline preoperative activity level, which increased to 70% at 2 weeks, 84% at 6 weeks, and 94% at 12 weeks,” Dr. Giugale said.

In all, 57% of patients used narcotic medicine the day after surgery, which decreased to 44% on day 3. The dosage was low, with a median oral morphine equivalent of 5 mg of oxycodone or less per day, she said.

Early postoperative pain may be influenced by procedure type, according to an exploratory analysis. Through the first postoperative day, “there was a trend toward more pain with uterosacral ligament suspension,” Dr. Giugale said. By day 3, sacrospinous ligament fixation was associated with significantly more postoperative pain.
 

 

 

The role of ERAS protocols

The heterogeneity of surgical procedures among the treatment groups and the use of a predefined ERAS protocol may have confounded the results. In addition, the researchers did not measure patient satisfaction, and the findings may not apply to different patient populations, Dr. Giugale noted.

“As more and more gynecologic surgery patients have surgery under these enhanced recovery protocols, maybe additional preemptive local analgesia for vaginal reconstructive surgery is not all that beneficial,” she said. “Maybe we are getting enough benefit from the enhanced [recovery] protocols themselves.”

The investigators studied a novel idea – dual local therapy for pain in patients undergoing pelvic floor surgery – and described a novel transobturator technique for levator injection, commented Sunil Balgobin, MD, associate director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.

“For the current opioid problem, development of alternative pain control strategies is extremely important to reduce narcotic use and improve patient outcomes,” Dr. Balgobin said. The study “addresses an important gap in the literature, is relevant to surgeons performing vaginal apical procedures, and aims to advance research in this area for the potential benefit of ... patients.”

Interpretation of the results for individual procedure types may be limited by the smaller sample sizes, he added.

The researchers and Dr. Balgobin had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Giugale L et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 10.

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Preoperative pelvic floor muscle injections and pudendal nerve blocks with bupivacaine and dexamethasone do not significantly improve pain control after vaginal apical prolapse repair, compared with placebo, according to a study.

In a randomized trial, patients generally reported mild postoperative pain and low dosages of narcotic use. “The majority reported that they returned to their baseline activity by 2 weeks after surgery, which should be reassuring to similar urogynecology patient populations,” said Lauren Giugale, MD.

Although many gynecologic surgeries increasingly are performed as outpatient procedures, patients may have inadequate pain control and persistently use narcotics after surgery. In an effort to reduce postoperative pain, doctors have tried preemptive analgesia with various local anesthetic techniques. These approaches have had mixed results, however, and there is “no consensus on the ideal local anesthetic technique to reduce postoperative pain after vaginal reconstructive surgery,” said Dr. Giugale, of the University of Pittsburgh.

To evaluate whether preoperative pelvic floor muscle injections and pudendal nerve blocks with bupivacaine and dexamethasone improve postoperative pain control after vaginal apical prolapse repairs, Dr. Giugale and colleagues conducted a three-arm, double-blind trial that included 75 patients. Patients received placebo (normal saline), bupivacaine alone, or bupivacaine combined with 4 mg of dexamethasone at four injection sites.

Dr. Giugale presented the study results at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.



A range of procedures

Participants received bilateral levator ani muscle injections via a transobturator approach and pudendal nerve blocks via a transvaginal approach. They received the injections – 5 mL at each site – after the administration of general anesthesia but before the start of surgery. “Anecdotally, we have had good success” with the transobturator approach to treating chronic pelvic pain, which was part of the rationale for the trial, said Dr. Giugale.

The study included women 18 years or older who were scheduled for a vaginal native tissue repair with apical support. Participants had to be able to tolerate general anesthesia with a standardized enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol. The investigators excluded women undergoing mesh-augmented prolapse repairs or abdominal surgery and those with chronic pelvic pain or immunosuppression.

Each treatment arm had 25 patients. Patients had an average age of 69 years and an average body mass index of 27.5 kg/m2. Most patients were white, and demographic variables did not significantly differ among the groups.

“The distribution of prolapse procedures was similar among study groups, with colpocleisis being the most common, followed by uterosacral ligament suspension, levator myorrhaphy, and sacrospinous ligament fixation,” said Dr. Giugale. Rates of concomitant hysterectomy were similar for each group.

Before surgery, patients completed pain, nausea, and activities assessments. At 6 hours after surgery, they completed pain and nausea assessments. During postoperative days 1 through 3, patients documented pain scores and analgesic use. One week after surgery, patients completed pain and activities assessments. And at postoperative weeks 2, 6, and 12, they completed additional activities assessments. The assessments included validated handouts that patients completed at home, and no additional office visits were required.

The numeric rating scale pain score on the day after surgery was the primary outcome, and the median pain score did not significantly differ among the groups (3.75 in the placebo group, 4 in the bupivacaine group, and 3 in the bupivacaine plus dexamethasone group). Between-group differences in pain scores at other time points also were not significant.

Activities assessments, nausea and vomiting scores, the percentage of patients with same-day discharge, urinary retention, postoperative narcotic use as measured by oral morphine equivalents, and adverse events also did not significantly differ among the groups.

“One week after surgery, 52% of women reported that they were at or better than their baseline preoperative activity level, which increased to 70% at 2 weeks, 84% at 6 weeks, and 94% at 12 weeks,” Dr. Giugale said.

In all, 57% of patients used narcotic medicine the day after surgery, which decreased to 44% on day 3. The dosage was low, with a median oral morphine equivalent of 5 mg of oxycodone or less per day, she said.

Early postoperative pain may be influenced by procedure type, according to an exploratory analysis. Through the first postoperative day, “there was a trend toward more pain with uterosacral ligament suspension,” Dr. Giugale said. By day 3, sacrospinous ligament fixation was associated with significantly more postoperative pain.
 

 

 

The role of ERAS protocols

The heterogeneity of surgical procedures among the treatment groups and the use of a predefined ERAS protocol may have confounded the results. In addition, the researchers did not measure patient satisfaction, and the findings may not apply to different patient populations, Dr. Giugale noted.

“As more and more gynecologic surgery patients have surgery under these enhanced recovery protocols, maybe additional preemptive local analgesia for vaginal reconstructive surgery is not all that beneficial,” she said. “Maybe we are getting enough benefit from the enhanced [recovery] protocols themselves.”

The investigators studied a novel idea – dual local therapy for pain in patients undergoing pelvic floor surgery – and described a novel transobturator technique for levator injection, commented Sunil Balgobin, MD, associate director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.

“For the current opioid problem, development of alternative pain control strategies is extremely important to reduce narcotic use and improve patient outcomes,” Dr. Balgobin said. The study “addresses an important gap in the literature, is relevant to surgeons performing vaginal apical procedures, and aims to advance research in this area for the potential benefit of ... patients.”

Interpretation of the results for individual procedure types may be limited by the smaller sample sizes, he added.

The researchers and Dr. Balgobin had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Giugale L et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 10.

Preoperative pelvic floor muscle injections and pudendal nerve blocks with bupivacaine and dexamethasone do not significantly improve pain control after vaginal apical prolapse repair, compared with placebo, according to a study.

In a randomized trial, patients generally reported mild postoperative pain and low dosages of narcotic use. “The majority reported that they returned to their baseline activity by 2 weeks after surgery, which should be reassuring to similar urogynecology patient populations,” said Lauren Giugale, MD.

Although many gynecologic surgeries increasingly are performed as outpatient procedures, patients may have inadequate pain control and persistently use narcotics after surgery. In an effort to reduce postoperative pain, doctors have tried preemptive analgesia with various local anesthetic techniques. These approaches have had mixed results, however, and there is “no consensus on the ideal local anesthetic technique to reduce postoperative pain after vaginal reconstructive surgery,” said Dr. Giugale, of the University of Pittsburgh.

To evaluate whether preoperative pelvic floor muscle injections and pudendal nerve blocks with bupivacaine and dexamethasone improve postoperative pain control after vaginal apical prolapse repairs, Dr. Giugale and colleagues conducted a three-arm, double-blind trial that included 75 patients. Patients received placebo (normal saline), bupivacaine alone, or bupivacaine combined with 4 mg of dexamethasone at four injection sites.

Dr. Giugale presented the study results at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.



A range of procedures

Participants received bilateral levator ani muscle injections via a transobturator approach and pudendal nerve blocks via a transvaginal approach. They received the injections – 5 mL at each site – after the administration of general anesthesia but before the start of surgery. “Anecdotally, we have had good success” with the transobturator approach to treating chronic pelvic pain, which was part of the rationale for the trial, said Dr. Giugale.

The study included women 18 years or older who were scheduled for a vaginal native tissue repair with apical support. Participants had to be able to tolerate general anesthesia with a standardized enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol. The investigators excluded women undergoing mesh-augmented prolapse repairs or abdominal surgery and those with chronic pelvic pain or immunosuppression.

Each treatment arm had 25 patients. Patients had an average age of 69 years and an average body mass index of 27.5 kg/m2. Most patients were white, and demographic variables did not significantly differ among the groups.

“The distribution of prolapse procedures was similar among study groups, with colpocleisis being the most common, followed by uterosacral ligament suspension, levator myorrhaphy, and sacrospinous ligament fixation,” said Dr. Giugale. Rates of concomitant hysterectomy were similar for each group.

Before surgery, patients completed pain, nausea, and activities assessments. At 6 hours after surgery, they completed pain and nausea assessments. During postoperative days 1 through 3, patients documented pain scores and analgesic use. One week after surgery, patients completed pain and activities assessments. And at postoperative weeks 2, 6, and 12, they completed additional activities assessments. The assessments included validated handouts that patients completed at home, and no additional office visits were required.

The numeric rating scale pain score on the day after surgery was the primary outcome, and the median pain score did not significantly differ among the groups (3.75 in the placebo group, 4 in the bupivacaine group, and 3 in the bupivacaine plus dexamethasone group). Between-group differences in pain scores at other time points also were not significant.

Activities assessments, nausea and vomiting scores, the percentage of patients with same-day discharge, urinary retention, postoperative narcotic use as measured by oral morphine equivalents, and adverse events also did not significantly differ among the groups.

“One week after surgery, 52% of women reported that they were at or better than their baseline preoperative activity level, which increased to 70% at 2 weeks, 84% at 6 weeks, and 94% at 12 weeks,” Dr. Giugale said.

In all, 57% of patients used narcotic medicine the day after surgery, which decreased to 44% on day 3. The dosage was low, with a median oral morphine equivalent of 5 mg of oxycodone or less per day, she said.

Early postoperative pain may be influenced by procedure type, according to an exploratory analysis. Through the first postoperative day, “there was a trend toward more pain with uterosacral ligament suspension,” Dr. Giugale said. By day 3, sacrospinous ligament fixation was associated with significantly more postoperative pain.
 

 

 

The role of ERAS protocols

The heterogeneity of surgical procedures among the treatment groups and the use of a predefined ERAS protocol may have confounded the results. In addition, the researchers did not measure patient satisfaction, and the findings may not apply to different patient populations, Dr. Giugale noted.

“As more and more gynecologic surgery patients have surgery under these enhanced recovery protocols, maybe additional preemptive local analgesia for vaginal reconstructive surgery is not all that beneficial,” she said. “Maybe we are getting enough benefit from the enhanced [recovery] protocols themselves.”

The investigators studied a novel idea – dual local therapy for pain in patients undergoing pelvic floor surgery – and described a novel transobturator technique for levator injection, commented Sunil Balgobin, MD, associate director of the female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery fellowship at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.

“For the current opioid problem, development of alternative pain control strategies is extremely important to reduce narcotic use and improve patient outcomes,” Dr. Balgobin said. The study “addresses an important gap in the literature, is relevant to surgeons performing vaginal apical procedures, and aims to advance research in this area for the potential benefit of ... patients.”

Interpretation of the results for individual procedure types may be limited by the smaller sample sizes, he added.

The researchers and Dr. Balgobin had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Giugale L et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 10.

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Are laser treatments better than steroids for lichen sclerosus?

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Tue, 07/21/2020 - 12:29

Laser treatment for lichen sclerosus was noninferior to steroid therapy after 6 months and may lead to better outcomes on various patient- and physician-reported measures, according to trial results presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Patients with lichen sclerosus often present with itching, burning, and dysuria. Untreated, the vulvar dystrophy can cause architectural changes and is associated with an increased risk of vulvar malignancies.

Topical steroids are the standard treatment. To assess whether fractional CO2 laser treatment is noninferior to clobetasol propionate at 6 months, Linda Burkett, MD, and colleagues conducted a randomized controlled trial. Dr. Burkett is affiliated with MedStar Washington Hospital Center and Georgetown University in Washington and UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh.

The researchers enrolled 52 postmenopausal women with biopsy-proven lichen sclerosus. Patients had to have significant symptoms reflected by a score of at least 21 on the Skindex-29.

Twenty-seven women were assigned to receive laser therapy, and 25 were assigned to receive steroids. One patient in the steroid arm was lost to follow-up. About half of the patients in each group had prior clobetasol propionate exposure.

Patients in the steroid arm were started on 0.05% clobetasol propionate used nightly for 4 weeks, then three times per week for 8 weeks, and then as needed. They had a phone call follow-up at 2 weeks to confirm compliance and an optional in-person appointment at 3 months.

Patients in the laser arm received three laser treatments 4-6 weeks apart.

At 6 months, all patients returned for repeat assessments. The primary outcome was the Skindex-29, a dermatologic questionnaire. Secondary outcomes included a patient visual analog scale of bothersome vulvar symptoms, a provider visual assessment score, the Vaginal Health Index, the Vulvovaginal Symptom Questionnaire, the Patient Global Impression of Improvement, and the Patient Global Impression of Satisfaction.

Average Skindex-29 scores from baseline to 6 months improved more in the laser treatment group, compared with the steroid group, for all health-related quality of life categories: overall, emotional, functional, and symptoms. “At 6 months across all scores, patients reported very little bother,” Dr. Burkett said.

Differences between the groups were statistically significant for all but the functional subscore.

Average scores on subjective secondary outcomes improved more in the laser treatment group, compared with the steroid treatment group. The between-group differences were statistically significant for irritation and the Vulvovaginal Symptom Questionnaire.

For provider-based scores, patients in the laser group had greater improvement on all measures except perianal involvement, relative to patients in the steroid group. In addition, fusion of the labia minora and phimosis worsened in the steroid group.

Differences between the groups were statistically significant for phimosis, erosion, and the Vaginal Health Index.

Significantly more patients in the laser group than in the steroid group were satisfied or very satisfied with the results at 6 months (81% vs. 41%). Patients in the laser group were more likely to report that they were better or much better (89% vs. 62%), though the difference was not statistically significant.

There were no major adverse events.

The trial – the first randomized controlled study of energy-based treatment for lichen sclerosus – was conducted at a single center, and treatment was not blinded, Dr. Burkett noted.

“The treatment effect was pretty significant in favor of laser therapy,” said Cecile A. Ferrando, MD, MPH, of the Center for Urogynecology and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery at Cleveland Clinic, commenting on the research.

“Compliance issues with clobetasol aside,” the findings raise the question of whether laser therapy should be offered as first-line treatment, Dr. Ferrando said.

The study might have been more robust had it excluded patients with previous clobetasol propionate exposure, Dr. Ferrando added.

Dr. Burkett noted that future studies may incorporate multiple centers, histology measures, and sham laser treatments and include only women who have not previously received clobetasol propionate.

The researchers had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Ferrando disclosed authorship royalties from UpToDate.

SOURCE: Burkett L et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 09.

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Laser treatment for lichen sclerosus was noninferior to steroid therapy after 6 months and may lead to better outcomes on various patient- and physician-reported measures, according to trial results presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Patients with lichen sclerosus often present with itching, burning, and dysuria. Untreated, the vulvar dystrophy can cause architectural changes and is associated with an increased risk of vulvar malignancies.

Topical steroids are the standard treatment. To assess whether fractional CO2 laser treatment is noninferior to clobetasol propionate at 6 months, Linda Burkett, MD, and colleagues conducted a randomized controlled trial. Dr. Burkett is affiliated with MedStar Washington Hospital Center and Georgetown University in Washington and UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh.

The researchers enrolled 52 postmenopausal women with biopsy-proven lichen sclerosus. Patients had to have significant symptoms reflected by a score of at least 21 on the Skindex-29.

Twenty-seven women were assigned to receive laser therapy, and 25 were assigned to receive steroids. One patient in the steroid arm was lost to follow-up. About half of the patients in each group had prior clobetasol propionate exposure.

Patients in the steroid arm were started on 0.05% clobetasol propionate used nightly for 4 weeks, then three times per week for 8 weeks, and then as needed. They had a phone call follow-up at 2 weeks to confirm compliance and an optional in-person appointment at 3 months.

Patients in the laser arm received three laser treatments 4-6 weeks apart.

At 6 months, all patients returned for repeat assessments. The primary outcome was the Skindex-29, a dermatologic questionnaire. Secondary outcomes included a patient visual analog scale of bothersome vulvar symptoms, a provider visual assessment score, the Vaginal Health Index, the Vulvovaginal Symptom Questionnaire, the Patient Global Impression of Improvement, and the Patient Global Impression of Satisfaction.

Average Skindex-29 scores from baseline to 6 months improved more in the laser treatment group, compared with the steroid group, for all health-related quality of life categories: overall, emotional, functional, and symptoms. “At 6 months across all scores, patients reported very little bother,” Dr. Burkett said.

Differences between the groups were statistically significant for all but the functional subscore.

Average scores on subjective secondary outcomes improved more in the laser treatment group, compared with the steroid treatment group. The between-group differences were statistically significant for irritation and the Vulvovaginal Symptom Questionnaire.

For provider-based scores, patients in the laser group had greater improvement on all measures except perianal involvement, relative to patients in the steroid group. In addition, fusion of the labia minora and phimosis worsened in the steroid group.

Differences between the groups were statistically significant for phimosis, erosion, and the Vaginal Health Index.

Significantly more patients in the laser group than in the steroid group were satisfied or very satisfied with the results at 6 months (81% vs. 41%). Patients in the laser group were more likely to report that they were better or much better (89% vs. 62%), though the difference was not statistically significant.

There were no major adverse events.

The trial – the first randomized controlled study of energy-based treatment for lichen sclerosus – was conducted at a single center, and treatment was not blinded, Dr. Burkett noted.

“The treatment effect was pretty significant in favor of laser therapy,” said Cecile A. Ferrando, MD, MPH, of the Center for Urogynecology and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery at Cleveland Clinic, commenting on the research.

“Compliance issues with clobetasol aside,” the findings raise the question of whether laser therapy should be offered as first-line treatment, Dr. Ferrando said.

The study might have been more robust had it excluded patients with previous clobetasol propionate exposure, Dr. Ferrando added.

Dr. Burkett noted that future studies may incorporate multiple centers, histology measures, and sham laser treatments and include only women who have not previously received clobetasol propionate.

The researchers had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Ferrando disclosed authorship royalties from UpToDate.

SOURCE: Burkett L et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 09.

Laser treatment for lichen sclerosus was noninferior to steroid therapy after 6 months and may lead to better outcomes on various patient- and physician-reported measures, according to trial results presented at the virtual annual scientific meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons.

Patients with lichen sclerosus often present with itching, burning, and dysuria. Untreated, the vulvar dystrophy can cause architectural changes and is associated with an increased risk of vulvar malignancies.

Topical steroids are the standard treatment. To assess whether fractional CO2 laser treatment is noninferior to clobetasol propionate at 6 months, Linda Burkett, MD, and colleagues conducted a randomized controlled trial. Dr. Burkett is affiliated with MedStar Washington Hospital Center and Georgetown University in Washington and UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh.

The researchers enrolled 52 postmenopausal women with biopsy-proven lichen sclerosus. Patients had to have significant symptoms reflected by a score of at least 21 on the Skindex-29.

Twenty-seven women were assigned to receive laser therapy, and 25 were assigned to receive steroids. One patient in the steroid arm was lost to follow-up. About half of the patients in each group had prior clobetasol propionate exposure.

Patients in the steroid arm were started on 0.05% clobetasol propionate used nightly for 4 weeks, then three times per week for 8 weeks, and then as needed. They had a phone call follow-up at 2 weeks to confirm compliance and an optional in-person appointment at 3 months.

Patients in the laser arm received three laser treatments 4-6 weeks apart.

At 6 months, all patients returned for repeat assessments. The primary outcome was the Skindex-29, a dermatologic questionnaire. Secondary outcomes included a patient visual analog scale of bothersome vulvar symptoms, a provider visual assessment score, the Vaginal Health Index, the Vulvovaginal Symptom Questionnaire, the Patient Global Impression of Improvement, and the Patient Global Impression of Satisfaction.

Average Skindex-29 scores from baseline to 6 months improved more in the laser treatment group, compared with the steroid group, for all health-related quality of life categories: overall, emotional, functional, and symptoms. “At 6 months across all scores, patients reported very little bother,” Dr. Burkett said.

Differences between the groups were statistically significant for all but the functional subscore.

Average scores on subjective secondary outcomes improved more in the laser treatment group, compared with the steroid treatment group. The between-group differences were statistically significant for irritation and the Vulvovaginal Symptom Questionnaire.

For provider-based scores, patients in the laser group had greater improvement on all measures except perianal involvement, relative to patients in the steroid group. In addition, fusion of the labia minora and phimosis worsened in the steroid group.

Differences between the groups were statistically significant for phimosis, erosion, and the Vaginal Health Index.

Significantly more patients in the laser group than in the steroid group were satisfied or very satisfied with the results at 6 months (81% vs. 41%). Patients in the laser group were more likely to report that they were better or much better (89% vs. 62%), though the difference was not statistically significant.

There were no major adverse events.

The trial – the first randomized controlled study of energy-based treatment for lichen sclerosus – was conducted at a single center, and treatment was not blinded, Dr. Burkett noted.

“The treatment effect was pretty significant in favor of laser therapy,” said Cecile A. Ferrando, MD, MPH, of the Center for Urogynecology and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery at Cleveland Clinic, commenting on the research.

“Compliance issues with clobetasol aside,” the findings raise the question of whether laser therapy should be offered as first-line treatment, Dr. Ferrando said.

The study might have been more robust had it excluded patients with previous clobetasol propionate exposure, Dr. Ferrando added.

Dr. Burkett noted that future studies may incorporate multiple centers, histology measures, and sham laser treatments and include only women who have not previously received clobetasol propionate.

The researchers had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Ferrando disclosed authorship royalties from UpToDate.

SOURCE: Burkett L et al. SGS 2020, Abstract 09.

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