Study Objective: To compare surgery-related outcomes of electric motorized morcellator (EMM) and transvaginal extraction (TVE) for myoma retrieval after laparoscopic myomectomy. Design: A retrospective propensity-matched analysis of prospectively collected data (Canadian Task Force classification II-2). Setting: A university teaching hospital. Patients: One hundred women undergoing laparoscopic myomectomy. Interventions: Laparoscopic myomectomy followed by myoma retrieval via TVE or EMM. Measurements and Main Results: Fifty propensity-matched patient pairs (100 patients) undergoing laparoscopic myomectomy followed by myoma retrieval via TVE or EMM were studied. No significant differences were observed in baseline patient characteristics. Operative times were similar between groups (66 vs 73minutes in the TVE and EMM group, respectively, p=.19). However, patients undergoing TVE experienced lower specimen retrieval time than patients undergoing extraction via EMM (5 [3-30] vs 7 [3-35] minutes, p<.001). Blood loss, transfusion, and complication rates were similar between groups. One retrieval-related complication occurred in the EMM group (bleeding from an incision using a morcellator requiring resuture). The need for an analgesic rescue dose was lower in the TVE group compared with patients in the EMM group (p=.03). Although overall satisfaction levels were similar between groups, TVE is related to higher cosmetic outcomes compared with EMM (9.5 [±0.6] vs 8.5 [±1], p<.001). Conclusion: TVE upholds the effectiveness of EMM, minimizing the operative time and potentially postoperative pain. Further large prospective studies are needed.

Electric motorized morcellator versus transvaginal extraction for myoma retrieval after laparoscopic myomectomy: a propensity-matched analysis

CROMI, ANTONELLA;SERATI, MAURIZIO;CASARIN, JVAN;GHEZZI, FABIO
2014-01-01

Abstract

Study Objective: To compare surgery-related outcomes of electric motorized morcellator (EMM) and transvaginal extraction (TVE) for myoma retrieval after laparoscopic myomectomy. Design: A retrospective propensity-matched analysis of prospectively collected data (Canadian Task Force classification II-2). Setting: A university teaching hospital. Patients: One hundred women undergoing laparoscopic myomectomy. Interventions: Laparoscopic myomectomy followed by myoma retrieval via TVE or EMM. Measurements and Main Results: Fifty propensity-matched patient pairs (100 patients) undergoing laparoscopic myomectomy followed by myoma retrieval via TVE or EMM were studied. No significant differences were observed in baseline patient characteristics. Operative times were similar between groups (66 vs 73minutes in the TVE and EMM group, respectively, p=.19). However, patients undergoing TVE experienced lower specimen retrieval time than patients undergoing extraction via EMM (5 [3-30] vs 7 [3-35] minutes, p<.001). Blood loss, transfusion, and complication rates were similar between groups. One retrieval-related complication occurred in the EMM group (bleeding from an incision using a morcellator requiring resuture). The need for an analgesic rescue dose was lower in the TVE group compared with patients in the EMM group (p=.03). Although overall satisfaction levels were similar between groups, TVE is related to higher cosmetic outcomes compared with EMM (9.5 [±0.6] vs 8.5 [±1], p<.001). Conclusion: TVE upholds the effectiveness of EMM, minimizing the operative time and potentially postoperative pain. Further large prospective studies are needed.
2014
Culdotomy; Laparoscopy; Morcellator; Myomectomy; Transvaginal extraction; Adult; Blood Loss, Surgical; Esthetics; Female; Humans; Leiomyoma; Length of Stay; Operative Time; Patient Satisfaction; Postoperative Hemorrhage; Propensity Score; Retrospective Studies; Risk Factors; Treatment Outcome; Uterine Myomectomy; Uterine Neoplasms; Laparoscopy; Natural Orifice Endoscopic Surgery
Bogani, G.; Uccella, S.; Cromi, Antonella; Serati, Maurizio; Casarin, Jvan; Sturla, D.; Ghezzi, Fabio
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2024378
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 6
  • Scopus 34
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 31
social impact