| Literature DB >> 28003798 |
Natalie A M Cooper1, Lee Middleton2, Paul Smith3, Elaine Denny4, Lynda Stobert5, Jane Daniels2, T Justin Clark6.
Abstract
Uterine polyps can cause abnormal bleeding in women. Conventional practise is to remove them under general anaesthesia but advances in technology have made it possible to perform polypectomy in the office setting. We conducted a patient-preference study to explore women's preferences for treatment setting and to evaluate the effectiveness and treatment experience of women undergoing uterine polypectomy. Three hundred ninety-nine women with abnormal uterine bleeding who were found to have uterine polyps at diagnostic hysteroscopy were recruited. Office polypectomies were performed in office hysteroscopy clinics, and inpatient procedures were undertaken in operating theatres. Three hundred twenty-four of 399 (81 %) expressed a preference for office treatment. There was no difference found between office treatment and inpatient treatment in terms of alleviating abnormal uterine bleeding as assessed by patients and in improving disease-specific quality of life. Acceptability was lower and patient pain scores were significantly higher in the office group. When offered a choice of treatment setting for uterine polypectomy, patients have a preference for office over inpatient treatment. Ambulatory gynaecology services should be available within healthcare systems to meet patient demand.Entities:
Keywords: Abnormal uterine bleeding; Ambulatory gynaecology; Office polypectomy; Patient preference; Uterine polyp
Year: 2016 PMID: 28003798 PMCID: PMC5133274 DOI: 10.1007/s10397-016-0946-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gynecol Surg ISSN: 1613-2076
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing enrollment, preference for treatment and follow-up of the study patients
Baseline characteristics of the patients
| Office polypectomy ( | Inpatient polypectomy ( |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | Mean (SD) | 53 (11) | 51 (12) |
|
| BMI (kg/m2) | Mean (SD) | 31 (8)a | 31 (8)b |
|
| Ethnicity | White | 263 (91 %) | 54 (93 %) |
|
| Asian | 12 (4 %) | 2 (3 %) | ||
| Black | 8 (3 %) | 1 (2 %) | ||
| Other | 6 (2 %) | 1 (2 %) | ||
| Not given/not known | 35 | 17 | ||
| Recruiting centre | BWHc | 105 (32 %) | 24 (32 %) |
|
| RHHd | 60 (19 %) | 18 (24 %) | ||
| Otherse | 159 (49 %) | 33 (44 %) | ||
| Predominant bleeding complaint at randomisation | Post-menopausalf | 155 (48 %) | 37 (49 %) |
|
| Heavy menstrualg | 75 (23 %) | 23 (31 %) | ||
| Intermenstrualh | 94 (29 %) | 15 (20 %) | ||
| Site of uterine polyp | Fundal | 118 (36 %) | 25 (33 %) |
|
| Non-fundal | 206 (64 %) | 50 (67 %) | ||
| Type of uterine polyp | Glandular | 229 (71 %) | 53 (71 %) |
|
| Fibrous | 95 (29 %) | 22 (29 %) | ||
| Number of polyps | 1 | 233 (72 %) | 58 (77 %) |
|
| 2 | 62 (19 %) | 11 (15 %) | ||
| > = 3 | 29 (9 %) | 6 (8 %) | ||
| Parity | 0 | 49 (15 %) | 18 (24 %) |
|
| 1 | 35 (11 %) | 6 (8 %) | ||
| 2 | 121 (37 %) | 26 (35 %) | ||
| 3 | 50 (15 %) | 9 (12 %) | ||
| > = 4 | 37 (11 %) | 8 (11 %) | ||
| missing | 32 (10 %) | 8 (11 %) | ||
| Other benign pathology | None | 318 (98 %) | 74 (99 %) |
|
| SMF/Adhesion/Septum | – | – | ||
| Adhesion/Septum | – | – | ||
| SMF | 5 (2 %) | 1 (1 %) | ||
| Septum | 1 (<1 %) | – |
SMF submucosal fibroid
aBased on 56 values
bBased on 207 values
cBirmingham Women’s Hospital
dRoyal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield
e28 other centres: median recruitment = 4 (IQR = [2, 9])
f16 (10 %) and 3 (8 %) of these women were currently taking a continuous combined ‘no bleed’ HRT in the office and inpatient groups, respectively
gIncludes one post-menopausal woman (1 %) on a sequential HRT (office group)
hIncludes two post-menopausal women (2 %) on a sequential HRT (office group)
Operative details and complications
| Office polypectomy | Inpatient polypectomy | Mean difference or OR (95 % CI)b, | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Largest polyp size, cm | 1.1 [0.8–2.0], 286 | 1.0 [0.8–2.0], 57 | 0.0 (−0.2, 0.2), |
| Need for cervical dilation = yes | 105/303 (35 %) | 52/67 (78 %) | 0.15 (0.08, 0.28), |
| Use of vaginal speculum = yes | 152/301 (50 %) | 53/60 (88 %) | 0.13 (0.06, 0.31), |
| Use of local anaesthetic = yes | 132/313 (42 %) | 2/73 (3 %) | 25.9 (6.2, 107), |
| Hysteroscopic removal = yes | 246/299 (82 %) | 36/64 (56 %) | 3.6 (2.0, 6.4), |
| Scope diameter (mm) | 4.0 [4.0–6.0], 201 | 5.5 [4.0–6.0], 42 | −1.0 (−1.0, −1.0), |
| Method used to detach |
|
| 2.0 (1.2, 3.5)c, |
| Electrode | 155 (54 %) | 24 (37 %) | |
| Mechanical | 102 (36 %) | 35 (54 %) | |
| Combination | 30 (10 %) | 6 (9 %) | |
| Method of retrieval |
|
| 5.6 (3.0, 10.4)d, |
| Hysteroscopic | 193 (66 %) | 16 (26 %) | |
| Mechanical | 69 (24 %) | 43 (69 %) | |
| Combination | 11 (4 %) | – | |
| None | 19 (7 %) | 3 (5 %) | |
| Surgeon grade = consultant | 233/305 (76 %) | 40/67 (60 %) | 2.2 (1.3, 3.8), |
| Time taken for polypectomy, min | 10 [ | 10 [ | −1.5 (3.0, 0.0), |
| Time in office room/theatre, min | 30 [20–35], 285 | 33 [25–45], 53 | −6.0 (−10.0, −2.0), |
| Removal success |
|
| 1.4 (0.5, 3.9)f, |
| Complete | 282 (90 %) | 68 (93 %) | |
| Partiale | 22 (7 %) | 3 (4 %) | |
| Failede | 8 (3 %) | 2 (3 %) | |
| Operative complications |
|
| |
| Vaso-vagal episode | 17 (6 %) | – | |
| Patient discomfort | 9 (3 %) | – | |
| Cervical trauma | 1 (<1 %) | 1 (1 %) | |
| Uterine perforation | – | – | |
| Otherg | 1 (<1 %) | – | |
| Postoperative complications |
|
| |
| Vaso-vagal episode | 14 (5 %) | 2 (3 %) | |
| Vomiting | 3 (1 %) | 2 (3 %) | |
| Severe pain | – | 2 (3 %) | |
| Further treatment/procedure given |
|
| |
| Mirena IUS | 42 (14 %) | 8 (13 %) | |
| Tranexamic acid | 9 (3 %) | – | |
| Progestogens | 3 (1 %) | – | |
| Endometrial destruction | 2 (1 %) | – | |
| Local oestrogen cream | 2 (1 %) | – | |
| Mefenamic acid | 1 (<1 %) | 1 (2 %) | |
| Contraceptive pill | 1 (<1 %) | – | |
| Missing treatment name | 2 (1 %) | 1 (2 %) |
Numbers in italics refer to the responses received for that particular question
n = number of responses
aPolyp size was estimated hysteroscopically
bMean difference < 0 indicates lower with office, similarly OR < 1 is lower with office. For skewed variables presented with medians, differences in location between groups were calculated using Hodges-Lehmann estimates and Moses’ confidence intervals
cOdds ratio calculated from ‘electrode’ versus any other category
dOdds ratio calculated from ‘hysteroscopic’ versus any other category
eNine (3 %) partial or failed patients in the office group and none in the inpatient group were immediately scheduled for reoperation. Six of these were scheduled to be an inpatient. Partial or failed reasons in the office group (%’s given of the total number, 312): patient discomfort (9, 3 %), unable to locate blindly (5, 2 %), unable to access under vision (4, 1 %), polyp too large (3, 1 %), failed hysteroscopy (1, <1 %), base cut but unable to remove (1, <1 %), wide base unable to fully resect (1, <1 %), vaso-vagal episode (1, <1 %), difficult access to base of polyp (1, <1 %), missing reason (4, 1 %); partial or failed reasons in the inpatient group (%’s given of the total number, 73): unable to access under vision (1, 1 %), unable to locate blindly (1, 1 %), deep sub-mucous fibroid polyp (1, 1 %), too broad base (1, 1 %), missing reason (1, 1 %)
fOdds ratio calculated from ‘partial’ or ‘failed’ versus complete
gOther complications: nausea
Results of quality of life assessments, bleeding and pain scores and procedure acceptability
| Office polypectomy | Inpatient polypectomy | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD, | Mean (SD, | Difference (95 % CI)a, | Adjusted differenceh (95 % CI), | |
| MMASb | ||||
| Baseline | 63 (26, 163) | 61 (28, 37) | ||
| 6 months | 77 (25, 135)g | 79 (25, 25)g | −3 (−12, 7), | −4 (−14, 3), |
| EuroQol EQ-5Dc | ||||
| Baseline | 0.79 (0.26, 312) | 0.72 (0.30, 71) | ||
| 6 months | 0.82 (0.25, 289)g | 0.81 (0.30, 56) | 0.00 (−0.07, 0.06), | 0.01 (−0.05, 0.08), |
| EuroQol health thermometerd | ||||
| Baseline | 78 (18, 305) | 75 (21, 71) | ||
| 6 months | 78 (19, 291) | 79 (20, 57) | −2 (−7, 3), | −1 (−4, 5), |
| Bleeding duration visual analogue scalee | ||||
| Baseline | 39 (26, 74) | 38 (26, 23) | ||
| 6 months | 30 (28, 65)g | 18 (19, 16)g | −13 (−27, 2), | −13 (−27, 2), |
| Bleeding amount visual analogue scalef | ||||
| Baseline | 59 (28, 75) | 58 (26, 23) | ||
| 6 months | 32 (28, 68)g | 26 (27, 16)g | −4 (−19, 11), | −3 (−20, 14), |
| Operation pain scores | ||||
| During procedurei | 42 (26, 296) | – | – | – |
| 60 min after procedure | 27 (24, 247) | 20 (24, 60) | −7 (−14, 0), | −8 (−11, −4), |
| On discharge | 22 (21, 276) | 13 (18, 57) | −9 (−15, −3), | −9 (−15, −3), |
|
|
| OR (95 % CI), | Adjusted ORh (95 % CI), | |
| Operation acceptability | ||||
| Totally | 194 (65 %) | 52 (81 %) | ||
| Generally | 48 (16 %) | 9 (14 %) | 0.21 (0.06, 0.69), | 0.19 (0.05, 0.70), |
| Fairly | 50 (17 %) | 3 (5%) | ||
| Unacceptable | 7 (2 %) | 0 (–) | ||
| Exposure embarrassing? | ||||
| Extremely | 5 (2 %) | 2 (3 %) | ||
| Moderately | 30 (10 %) | 7 (12 %) | 1.4 (0.6, 3.0), | 1.4 (0.6, 3.7), |
| A little | 90 (30 %) | 8 (13 %) | ||
| No | 177 (59 %) | 43 (72 %) | ||
| Recommend to a friend? | ||||
| Yes/total | 282/302 (93 %) | 62/64 (97 %) | 0.45 (0.10, 2.0), | Not possible to compute |
| Same treatment again? | ||||
| Yes/total | 283/300 (94 %) | 62/63 (98 %) | 0.27 (0.04, 2.1), | Not possible to compute |
| Preferred alternative treatment? | ||||
| Yes/total | 36/299 (12 %) | 10/63 (16 %) | 1.4 (0.7, 3.0), | 1.5 (0.7, 3.5), |
n number of responses
aDifference between groups at each time point adjusted for baseline score. Estimates of differences >0 favour office polypectomy, those <0 favour inpatient polypectomy
bMenorrhagia Multi-Attribute Scale questionnaire. Scores range from 0 (severely affected) to 100 (not affected). Restricted to those with heavy menstrual and intermenstrual bleeding only
cHealth-related quality of life questionnaire. Scores range from −0.59 (health state worse than death) to 1.0 (perfect health state)
dHealth-related quality of life questionnaire. Scores range 0 (worst imaginable health state) to 1.0 (best imaginable health state)
eVisual Analogue Scale score. Scores range from 0 (no days of bleeding in the last month) to 100 (bleeding every day in the last month). Restricted to those with heavy menstrual bleeding only
fVisual Analogue Scale score. Scores range from 0 (no bleeding in the last month) to 100 (heaviest imaginable bleeding in the last month). Restricted to those with heavy menstrual bleeding only
g p < 0.05 when compared with baseline score within group (by paired t test)
hSee statistical methods section for details on adjustments
iVisual Analogue Scale score. Scores range from 0 (no pain at all) to 100 (worst imaginable pain). T test used for analysis
jEstimates of OR > 1 favour office polypectomy, those <1 favour inpatient polypectomy
kTotally acceptable/generally acceptable vs. fairly acceptable/unacceptable combined categories used to calculate odds ratio
lExtremely/moderately vs. a little/no combined categories used to calculate odds ratio