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Surgical treatment of deeply infiltrating endometriosis with colorectal involvement

TLDR
Prospective studies reporting standardized and well-defined clinical outcome after surgical treatment of deeply infiltrating endometriosis with colorectal involvement with long-term follow-up are needed.
Abstract
background: Treatment of colorectal endometriosis is difficult and challenging. We reviewed the clinical outcome of surgical treatment of deeply infiltrating endometriosis (DIE) with colorectal involvement. methods: Review was based upon a literature search using following search terms: (1) ‘surgery’ and ‘colorectal endometriosis’, (2) ‘bowel’ and ‘endometriosis’ and ‘surgery’. Inclusion criteria: clear explanation of surgical technique and follow-up data on at least one of the following items: complications, pain, quality of life (QOL), fertility and recurrence. results: Most of the 49 studies included complications (94%) and pain (67%); few studies reported recurrence (41%), fertility (37%) and QOL (10%); only 29% reported (loss of) follow-up. Out of 3894 patients, 71% received bowel resection anastomosis, 10% received fullthickness disc excision and 17% were treated with superficial surgery. Comparison of clinical outcome between different surgical techniques was not possible. Post-operative complications were present in 0 –3% of the patients. Although pain improvement was reported in most studies, pain evaluation was patient-based in ,50% (Visual Analogue Scale in only 18%). While QOL was improved in most studies, prospective data were only available for 149 patients. Pregnancy rates were 23–57% with a cumulative pregnancy rate of 58 –70% within 4 years. The overall endometriosis recurrence rate in studies (.2 years follow-up) was 5 –25% with most of the studies reporting 10%. Owing to highly variable study design and data collection, a CONSORT-inspired checklist was developed for future studies.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic review of quality of life measures in patients with endometriosis

TL;DR: The SF-36, a generic HRQoL measure, was found to be the most frequently used scale, followed by the EHP-30, a measure specific to endometriosis, and both perform well, when compared with other scales, with scale weaknesses offset by strengths.
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External validation of the endometriosis fertility index (EFI) staging system for predicting non-ART pregnancy after endometriosis surgery

TL;DR: The data provide validation of the EFI in an external fertility unit on a robust scientific basis, to identify couples with a good prognosis for spontaneous conception who can therefore defer ART treatment, regardless of their revised American Fertility Society (rAFS) endometriosis staging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Colorectal endometriosis and fertility.

TL;DR: A potential benefit of surgery on fertility outcomes for women with colorectal endometriosis is supported and further studies are required to determine whether surgical management should be first-intention or restricted to failure of MAR.
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Adenomyosis and reproductive performance after surgery for rectovaginal and colorectal endometriosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: A systematic literature review identified all English-language reports on surgical treatment for rectovaginal and colorectal endometriosis, including bowel resection, in which participants were screened preoperatively for uterine adenomyosis, and Adenomyosis was associated with a 68% reduction in the likelihood of pregnancy.
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Bowel endometriosis: Colorectal surgeon’s perspective in a multidisciplinary surgical team

TL;DR: Long-term outcomes, following bowel resection for severe endometriosis, regarding pain and recurrence rate are good with a pregnancy rate of 50%, and Multidisciplinary laparoscopic treatment has become the standard of care.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Extending the CONSORT statement to randomized trials of nonpharmacologic treatment: explanation and elaboration.

TL;DR: This elaboration and explanation document is developed from a review of the literature to provide examples of adequate reporting in trials of nonpharmacologic treatments and should help to improve the reporting of RCTs performed in this field.
Journal ArticleDOI

ESHRE guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of endometriosis

TL;DR: A working group was convened comprised of practising gynaecologists and experts in evidence-based medicine from Europe, as well as an endometriosis self-help group representative, and the guideline was developed and refined.
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Endometriosis: epidemiology and aetiological factors

TL;DR: These epidemiological findings strongly support the menstrual reflux hypothesis and include the demonstration of viable endometrial cells in the menstrual effluent and peritoneal fluid, and an association between obstructed menstrual outflow and endometriosis.
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High rates of autoimmune and endocrine disorders, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome and atopic diseases among women with endometriosis: a survey analysis

TL;DR: Hypothyroidism, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, autoimmune diseases, allergies and asthma are all significantly more common in women with endometriosis than in women in the general USA population.
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