Cirkel C, Göbel H, Göbel C, Alkatout I, Khalil A, Brüggemann N, Rody A, Cirkel A
Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, University Hospital Schleswig Holstein, Campus Luebeck, Luebeck, Germany.
Kiel Migraine and Headache Centre, Kiel, Germany.
Hum Reprod. 2025 Jan 1;40(1):69-76. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deae257.
Is there a difference in the use of endocrine endometriosis therapy in endometriosis patients with and without endometrioma?
Patients with endometriomas received significantly less endocrine endometriosis treatment (present intake in 42.5%) compared to patients with other forms of endometriosis and without endometriomas (present intake in 52.1%).
Endocrine endometriosis therapy in patients with endometriomas reduces the risk of recurrence and therefore the risk of further surgery and subsequent irreversible damage to ovaries which results into reduced antral follicle counts (AFC), anti-Mullerian hormone levels (AMH), and early menopause. However, there is evidence of increasing rejection of endocrine endometriosis treatment in this population.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: A total of 838 premenopausal woman with dysmenorrhea and/or endometriosis (mean age 30.7 ± 6.9 years, range 15-54 years) were included in this observational cross-sectional multicenter study. Data including the extent of dysmenorrhea, prevalence of other comorbidities like migraine with aura and migraine never with aura, diagnosis of endometriosis, history of endometriosis surgery, and hormone therapy, were collected in a retrospective online survey from May to November 2023.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Patients visiting two university hospital endometriosis centers between January 2017 and March 2023, and with available email address, were invited for study participation by email in May 2023. Further recruitment of participants was achieved through the website and social medial channels of the German Endometriosis Association. Participation in the online survey was open between May and November 2023.
In the subgroup of women (with dysmenorrhea) without surgically confirmed endometriosis (SCE) (n = 277), 95 (34.3%) were currently undergoing endocrine treatment for dysmenorrhea and contraceptional purposes. On the contrary, in the subgroup of patients with SCE (n = 561), 275 (49.0%) were currently undergoing hormonal treatment. Subjects with SCE therefore significantly more commonly took endocrine treatment (F = 16.587, P < 0.001) compared to those without SCE. Endometriomas were present in 254 patients (45.2% of all SCE patients), and these patients were significantly less likely to have used hormonal treatment (i) in the present and (ii) in the past (i. n = 113 42.5%, ii. n = 187, 73.9%) compared to patients with other forms of endometriosis (n = 261) (i. n = 139, 52.1%, ii. n = 220, 84.3%) (i. F = 3.976, P = 0.047, ii. F = 8.297, P = 0.004). Various reasons for rejection of endocrine endometriosis treatment were analyzed, when comparing endometrioma subjects to patients with other types of endometriosis, but no statistical differences were found.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: This study is limited by its retrospective design and an online questionnaire with patient-reported outcomes. A selection bias due to the voluntary nature of the study and the online recruitment is also possible.
The results show that patients often refuse endocrine endometriosis treatments without a rational medical reason. According to the literature, this unnecessarily exposes these patients to a higher risk for endometrioma recurrence and subsequently a higher risk of repeat surgery and permanent damage to ovarian function.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This study was funded by the University of Luebeck (budget for university teaching and research). A.C. was supported by DFG (CRC/TR 296 'Local control of TH action', LocoTact, P07) and by funds of University of Luebeck, medical section (LACS01-2024). N.B. was supported by the DFG (BR4328.2-1, GRK1957), the Michael J Fox Foundation, the Collaborative Center for X-linked Dystonia-Parkinsonism and the EU Joint Programme-Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND). C.C., H.G., C.G., I.A., A.K., A.R. received no funding for this study. There were no competing interests.
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患有和未患有卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿的子宫内膜异位症患者在使用内分泌疗法治疗子宫内膜异位症方面是否存在差异?
与患有其他形式子宫内膜异位症且未患卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿的患者(当前接受治疗的比例为52.1%)相比,患有卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿的患者接受内分泌疗法治疗子宫内膜异位症的比例显著更低(当前接受治疗的比例为42.5%)。
对患有卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿的患者采用内分泌疗法治疗子宫内膜异位症可降低复发风险,进而降低进一步手术的风险以及随后卵巢受到不可逆损害的风险,卵巢损害会导致窦卵泡计数(AFC)、抗苗勒管激素水平(AMH)降低以及过早绝经。然而,有证据表明该人群对内分泌疗法治疗子宫内膜异位症的接受度在下降。
研究设计、规模、持续时间:本观察性横断面多中心研究纳入了838名有痛经和/或子宫内膜异位症的绝经前女性(平均年龄30.7±6.9岁,范围15 - 54岁)。2023年5月至11月通过回顾性在线调查收集了包括痛经程度、偏头痛伴先兆和无先兆偏头痛等其他合并症的患病率、子宫内膜异位症诊断、子宫内膜异位症手术史以及激素治疗等数据。
参与者/材料、研究环境、方法:邀请了2017年1月至2023年3月期间前往两家大学医院子宫内膜异位症中心就诊且有可用电子邮件地址的患者于2023年5月通过电子邮件参与研究。通过德国子宫内膜异位症协会的网站和社交媒体渠道进一步招募参与者。2023年5月至11月开放在线调查参与。
在未经过手术确诊为子宫内膜异位症(SCE)的痛经女性亚组(n = 277)中,95名(34.3%)目前正在接受针对痛经和避孕目的的内分泌治疗。相反,在SCE患者亚组(n = 561)中,275名(49.0%)目前正在接受激素治疗。因此,与未患SCE的患者相比,SCE患者接受内分泌治疗的比例显著更高(F = 16.587,P < 0.001)。254名患者(占所有SCE患者的45.2%)患有卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿,与患有其他形式子宫内膜异位症的患者(n = 261)相比,这些患者目前(i. n = 113,42.5%)和过去(ii. n = 187,73.9%)使用激素治疗的可能性显著更低(i. n = 139,52.1%,ii. n = 220,84.3%)(i. F = 3.976,P = 0.047,ii. F = 8.2,97,P = 0.004)。在比较患有卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿的患者与其他类型子宫内膜异位症患者时,分析了拒绝内分泌疗法治疗子宫内膜异位症的各种原因,但未发现统计学差异。
局限性、谨慎原因:本研究受其回顾性设计以及采用患者报告结局在线问卷的限制。由于研究的自愿性质和在线招募方式,也可能存在选择偏倚。
结果表明,患者常常在没有合理医学理由的情况下拒绝内分泌疗法治疗子宫内膜异位症。根据文献,这不必要地使这些患者面临卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿复发的更高风险,进而面临再次手术和卵巢功能永久性损害的更高风险。
研究资金/利益冲突:本研究由吕贝克大学资助(大学教学和研究预算)。A.C.得到了德国研究基金会(DFG)(CRC/TR 296“甲状腺激素作用的局部调控”,LocoTact,P07)以及吕贝克大学医学部资金(LACS01 - 2024)的支持。N.B.得到了德国研究基金会(BR4328.2 - 1,GRK1957)、迈克尔·J·福克斯基金会、X连锁肌张力障碍 - 帕金森综合征协作中心以及欧盟联合计划 - 神经退行性疾病研究(JPND)的支持。C.C.、H.G.、C.G.、I.A.、A.K.、A.R.未获得本研究的资金。不存在利益冲突。
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