| Literature DB >> 28144125 |
Farr Nezhat1, Radu Apostol1, Alexis D Greene1, Marjorie L Pilkinton2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The inadvertent dissemination of uterine cancer cells with the power morcellator has received much attention in the press and a warning from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Many hospitals prohibit the use of the morcellator in gynecologic surgery. We conducted a survey in an attempt to assess gynecologic surgeons' beliefs regarding the intracorporeal power morcellation of fibroids in light of the risk of dissemination of malignancy in patients in whom the presence of cancer is unknown before surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Fibroid tumor; Leiomyoma; Morcellator; Power morcellation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28144125 PMCID: PMC5266514 DOI: 10.4293/JSLS.2016.00092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JSLS ISSN: 1086-8089 Impact factor: 2.172
Survey on Intracorporeal Power Morcellators
Age: o Please choose one: o 20–30 o 31–40 o 41–50 o 51–60 o 60+ What is your current level of training? o Fellow o Attending o Senior attending (20+ years) Do you use an intracorporeal power morcellator currently? o Yes o No If you do NOT use a power morcellator currently, what is your reason for not using it? o I do not feel comfortable using it o My hospital does not keep a morcellator in stock o My hospital has banned the use of the morcellator o Not applicable Does your hospital or hospital system have a policy about the use of morcellation? o Yes o No o I don't know Have you heard about the recent press concerning dissemination of occult uterine malignancy after power morcellation? o Yes o No Will the risk of disseminated disease make you stop using the morcellator? o Yes o No Do you think intracorporeal morcellation of occult malignancy affects survival? o Yes o No Do you think intracorporeal morcellation can disseminate benign pathology, including endometriosis and fibroids? o Yes o No Have you personally seen a uterine sarcoma diagnosed, which was not suspected preoperatively o Yes o No What percent of your cases are performed open, laparoscopic, robotic, or MIS with mini-incision for tissue extraction? |
Survey Responses
| Item | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Country | 19 Missing |
| USA | 317 (64) |
| Other | 182 (36) |
| Q1. Age | 78 Missing |
| 20–30 | 6 (1) |
| 31–40 | 74 (17) |
| 41–50 | 132 (30) |
| 51–60 | 147 (33) |
| 61+ | 81 (18) |
| Q2. Level of training | 6 Missing |
| Attending | 209 (41) |
| Fellow | 61 (12) |
| Senior Attending (20+ years) | 242 (47) |
| Q3. Use intracorporeal power morcellator | 5 Missing |
| No | 313 (61) |
| Yes | 200 (39) |
| Q4. Reason for not using power morcellator | 1 Missing |
| Not comfortable | 61 (20) |
| Hospital does not keep in stock | 53 (17) |
| Hospital banned morcellator | 149 (48) |
| NA | 49 (16) |
| Q5. Hospital have policy about morcellation | 6 Missing |
| DK | 31 (6) |
| No | 207 (40) |
| Yes | 274 (54) |
| Q6. Heard about press concerning dissemination of occult uterine malignancy after morcellation | 4 Missing |
| No | 19 (4) |
| Yes | 495 (96) |
| Q7. Will risk of disseminated disease make you stop using morcellator | 6 Missing |
| No | 339 (66) |
| Yes | 173 (34) |
| Q8. Does morcellation of occult malignancy affect survival | 7 Missing |
| No | 204 (40) |
| Yes | 307 (60) |
| Q9. Can morcellation disseminate benign pathology, including endometriosis and fibroids | 4 Missing |
| No | 160 (31) |
| Yes | 354 (69) |
| Q10. Personally seen uterine sarcoma diagnosed not suspected pre-op | 4 Missing |
| No | 268 (52) |
| Yes | 246 (48) |
| Q11. What percent of your cases are performed open, laparoscopic, robotic, or MIS with mini-incision for tissue extraction? | |
| Open | 41 Missing |
| <10% | 286 (60) |
| 10–25% | 75 (16) |
| 25–49% | 41 (9) |
| 50% | 31 (6) |
| 51–75% | 17 (3) |
| 75–90% | 14 (3) |
| >90% | 13 (3) |
| Laparoscopic | 30 Missing |
| <10% | 45 (9) |
| 10–25% | 65 (13) |
| 25–49% | 72 (15) |
| 50% | 53 (11) |
| 51–75% | 67 (14) |
| 75–90% | 89 (18) |
| >90% | 97 (20) |
| Robotic | 141 Missing |
| <10% | 195 (51) |
| 10–25% | 33 (9) |
| 25–49% | 44 (12) |
| 50% | 12 (3) |
| 51–75% | 34 (9) |
| 75–90% | 30 (8) |
| >90% | 29 (8) |
Cross-tabulations With Use of Power Morcellator
| Use Power Morcellator Currently | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | ||
| n = 313 | n = 200 | ||
| Q2. Level of training | 4 Missing | 1 Missing | |
| Attending | 143 (69) | 65 (31) | |
| Fellow | 35 (59) | 24 (41) | |
| Senior attending (20+ years) | 131 (54) | 110 (46) | |
| Q6. Heard about press concerning dissemination of occult uterine malignancy after morcellation | 1 Missing | 2 Missing | 0.3276 |
| No | 13 (72) | 5 (28) | |
| Yes | 299 (61) | 193 (39) | |
| Q7. Will risk of disseminated disease make you stop using morcellator? | 2 Missing | ||
| No | 174 (88) | ||
| Yes | 24 (12) | ||
| Q8. Does morcellation of occult malignancy affect survival? | 2 Missing | 4 Missing | |
| No | 110 (55) | 91 (45) | |
| Yes | 201 (66) | 105 (34) | |
| Q9. Can morcellation disseminate benign pathology, including endometriosis and fibroids? | 1 Missing | 1 Missing | 0.1906 |
| No | 91 (57) | 69 (43) | |
| Yes | 221 (63) | 130 (37) | |
| Q10. Personally seen uterine sarcoma diagnosed not suspected pre-operatively? | 1 Missing | 1 Missing | 0.2169 |
| No | 155 (58) | 110 (42) | |
| Yes | 157 (64) | 89 (36) | |
Probabilities in bold indicate significant results.