Adhesion prevention in endometriosis: a neglected critical challenge

Author affiliations (2)
  • Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico ROR
  • San Raffaele University of Rome ROR

Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology, 19(4), 415-421, 2012

DOI 10.1016/j.jmig.2012.03.004 PMID 22575862

Abstract

Prevention of adhesions, whether de novo or by re-formation, is one of the most important and surprisingly neglected aspect of the treatment of endometriosis. Adhesions may cause infertility, dyspareunia, chronic pelvic pain but also intestinal obstruction and complications at subsequent surgery. They may play a role in the development of some forms of the disease such as ovarian endometriomas and possibly also deep invasive nodules. Three randomized controlled trials have been published documenting some partial success with Interceed, Oxiplex/AP gel or Adept solution in reducing adhesions extent at second look laparoscopy performed a few weeks after initial surgery. However, data on relevant long-term outcomes such as fertility, pelvic pain or disease recurrences or other adhesions-related complications is lacking. Noteworthy, endometriosis is a chronic inflammatory disorder and the insult causing adhesions is expected to persist after surgery. Therefore preventing adhesion formation with exclusively agents at the time of surgery may be insufficient. Future studies should focus on a 2-step strategy that includes measures applied at the time of surgery and subsequent administration of agents able to prevent the development of new adhesions.

Topics

adhesion prevention endometriosis surgery, postoperative adhesion formation endometriosis laparoscopy, anti-adhesion barriers endometriosis Interceed Oxiplex Adept, Somigliana adhesion prevention endometriosis review, chronic inflammatory adhesion recurrence endometriosis, two-step strategy adhesion prevention surgical and pharmacologic, ovarian endometrioma adhesion pathogenesis, second look laparoscopy adhesion reduction randomized controlled trial, deep invasive endometriosis adhesion role, adhesion related infertility dyspareunia chronic pelvic pain
PMID 22575862 22575862 DOI 10.1016/j.jmig.2012.03.004 10.1016/j.jmig.2012.03.004

Cite this article

Somigliana, E., Vigano, P., Benaglia, L., Busnelli, A., Vercellini, P., & Fedele, L. (2012). Adhesion prevention in endometriosis: a neglected critical challenge. *Journal of minimally invasive gynecology*, *19*(4), 415-421. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmig.2012.03.004

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