| Literature DB >> 28553555 |
Laura Geraci1, Alessandro Napoli2, Carlo Catalano2, Massimo Midiri1, Cesare Gagliardo1.
Abstract
Uterine fibroids, the most common benign tumor in women of childbearing age, may cause symptoms including pelvic pain, menorrhagia, dysmenorrhea, pressure, urinary symptoms, and infertility. Various approaches are available to treat symptomatic uterine fibroids. Magnetic Resonance-guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS) represents a recently introduced noninvasive safe and effective technique that can be performed without general anesthesia, in an outpatient setting. We review the principles of MRgFUS, describing patient selection criteria for the treatments performed at our center and we present a series of five selected patients with symptomatic uterine fibroids treated with this not yet widely known technique, showing its efficacy in symptom improvement and fibroid volume reduction.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28553555 PMCID: PMC5434313 DOI: 10.1155/2017/2520989
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Radiol ISSN: 2090-6870
Summary table for uterine fibroids.
|
| Unknown |
|
| |
|
| >60% over the age of 45 years |
|
| |
|
| >30 years |
|
| |
|
| Age, black race, early age at menarche, familial predisposition, overweight, polycystic ovary syndrome, diabetes, hypertension, nulliparity |
|
| |
|
| Menorrhagia, dysmenorrhea, anemia, pelvic pressure or pain, urinary symptoms, constipation, backache or leg pains, dyspareunia, infertility, or miscarriage |
|
| |
|
| Treatment is required in up to 25% of women. Treatment options include medications, such as gonadotropin-releasing hormone (Gn-RH) agonists, hysterectomy, myomectomy, myolysis, uterine artery embolization, MR-guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS) |
|
| |
|
| Benign tumor, excellent prognosis. In general, they begin to shrink after menopause, and they can grow quickly during pregnancy. They may also bleed into themselves, degenerate, become cystic, calcify, or undergo sarcomatous degeneration (<1% of cases) |
|
| |
|
| Well-defined uterine mass with uniformly low signal intensity as compared to the myometrium on T2-w images and iso-hypointense to the myometrium on T1-w images that enhances homogeneously when gadolinium is administered intravenously. Degenerated fibroids show complex appearance with high or heterogeneous signal on T2-w and postcontrast images |
Comparison of hysterectomy, myomectomy, uterine artery embolization (UAE), and MRgFUS.
| Procedure | Hysterectomy | Myomectomy | Uterine artery embolization (UAE) | MRgFUS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description | Surgical removal of the uterus with or without the cervix. There are several different surgical approaches: vaginal hysterectomy (performed through an incision in the vagina), abdominal hysterectomy (through a horizontal incision on the lower abdomen), and laparoscopic hysterectomy (through four tiny incisions on the abdomen). | Surgical removal of one or more fibroids from within the uterus. It can be performed through several different ways: abdominal myomectomy, laparoscopic myomectomy, and hysteroscopic myomectomy (only for women with submucosal fibroids). | UAE involves blocking, with small particles injected through a catheter, the blood vessels that supply the fibroids, causing them to shrink. | High intensity focused ultrasound waves heat and destroy |
|
| ||||
| Return to normal activities | 7 to 56 days. | 1 to 44 days. | 3 to 10 days, | 1 day. |
|
| ||||
| Hospital days | 1 to 5 days. | 0 to 3 days. | 0 to 1 day, | Outpatient procedure; no hospital stay. |
|
| ||||
| Procedure time | 1.5 to 3 hours. | 1 to 3 hours. | 30 minutes to 1.5 hours, | 1.5 to 4 hours. |
|
| ||||
| Advantages | Fibroids will not recur because the uterus is removed. The ovaries may be removed or spared. | Only the fibroids are removed; reproductive potential is spared. | Most fibroids can be treated. Incision is small and uterus is retained. Hospital stay is short (1 day) and in some cases may be performed as an outpatient procedure. Recurrence of treated fibroids is very rare. Return to normal activity within 10 days. | Day care procedure requiring no hospitalization, no incisions, no ionizing radiation, no general anesthesia. Severe complications virtually absent. Return to daily activities from the next day of treatment. Fertility is preserved. |
|
| ||||
| Disadvantages/risks | Reproductive potential is lost. Side effects may include early menopause and a reduction in libido. Removal of the ovaries in a premenopausal woman can lead to hot flashes, vaginal dryness, and osteoporosis. Possible surgical risks include bleeding, infections, adhesions, injury to the intestines, or bladder. | Fibroids can regrow and/or new fibroids can develop resulting in recurrent symptoms and additional procedures. The younger the woman is and the more the fibroids are present at the time of myomectomy, the more likely she is to develop fibroids in the future. Possible surgical risks include bleeding, adhesions, and infections. | Low risk of menopause and blockage of blood supply to ovaries. Possible surgical risks include bleeding, uterine infection, blood clots, and injury of the ovaries and to the uterus, potentially leading to a hysterectomy. | Not all type of fibroids can be treated. Fibroids may recur with time. It is a safe procedure with minimal risk; infrequent complications are abdominal pain/cramping, back or leg pain, urinary tract infection, vaginal discharge, skin injury (burns), and transient nerve damage. |
|
| ||||
| Future fertility | Reproductive potential is lost. | Possibility of pregnancy after adequate healing time. A cesarean section may be required for delivery. | Unpredictable effect on fertility. | Fertility is preserved. |
Figure 1Illustrative pelvic MRI scans of excluded patients: (a) axial T2-w showing three small fibroids (asterisks) and many bowel loops (white arrows) that are interposed between the skin surface and the hypothetic target; (b) sagittal T2-w of a large fibroid which almost occupies the whole pelvis and is dangerously close to sacrum bone and nerves (this patient performed the screening MRI in supine feet first position since she reported some discomfort in maintaining the prone position); (c) axial T2-w showing a small and pedunculated subserosal fibroid (asterisk); (d) sagittal T2-w of a “bright” untreatable cellular fibroid; (e) axial T1-w with fat saturation acquired after intravenous injection of paramagnetic contrast medium showing a nonenhancing fibroid; (f) sagittal T2-w of a patients with a bulky scar in abdominal skin (white arrow).
Figure 2Screenshot from the ExAblate workstation showing the planned target of patient in case 3 after the first sonication performed. In bottom left, the HI-FU beam representation is shown in light blue, the red line indicates the skin-gel pad interface, and critical structures are secured by the use of specific low-energy density region (LEDR) and no-pass regions markers (bowel in pink, pubic bone in light blue). The target volume (region of treatment, ROT) has been split into multiple subvolumes (green and yellow voxels) each of which will be ablated by a specific sonication. Patients' movements during treatment are monitored by reviewing fiducials (red crosshairs) placed by the treating physician on distinct anatomic structures which can be monitored during real-time MR imaging. Real-time thermal mapping after the first sonication is shown in the bottom right graph (maximum temperature achieved in the focal spot is 71°C).
Figure 3Case 1: (a) sagittal T1-w with fat saturation acquired after intravenous injection of paramagnetic contrast medium showing the two small fibroids (white arrows) located in the near field that were not directly treated but that became nonperfused too after the treatment; two bigger fibroids treated are visible too; (b) a follow-up MRI (T1-w with fat saturation acquired after intravenous injection of paramagnetic contrast medium) showing a normal vascularization of the two small fibroids.
Figure 4Case 2: sagittal T2-w intraoperative scan showing the targeted fibroid (asterisk) and full bladder (B) with urinary catheter present. Bowels obstructing the beam path were mitigated using a custom sliced (dashed line) gel pad (GP) and rectal filling with ultrasound gel (R). Curved arrow mimics the dislocation of the bowel loops. This treatment was successfully performed through the full bladder.
Figure 5Case 3: (a) screening coronal T2-w showing the bigger intramural fibroid on the right wall of the uterus, the small intracavitary submucosal fibroid on the mid left (white arrow), and one more small intramural fibroid on the left wall of the uterus; (b) axial T1-w acquired after intravenous injection of paramagnetic contrast medium acquired at the end of the treatment showing treated fibroids as nonenhancing round lesions (white arrow on the small intracavitary submucosal fibroid); (c) in a follow-up MRI, the small intracavitary submucosal fibroid was no more appreciable; the white arrow shows the “empty” uterine cavity after spontaneous vaginal expulsion.
Figure 6Case 4: example of a treatment with a low ablation rate (NPV = 57%); (a) screening axial T2-w scan; (b) sagittal T1-w with fat saturation acquired after intravenous injection of paramagnetic contrast medium acquired at the end of the treatment.
Figure 7Case 5: example of a treatment with a very high ablation rate (NPV = 99%); (a) screening axial T2-w scan; (b) sagittal T1-w with fat saturation acquired after intravenous injection of paramagnetic contrast medium acquired at the end of the treatment.