| Literature DB >> 29225469 |
David M Riding1, Vivak Hansrani2, Charles McCollum1.
Abstract
Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) affects 24% of premenopausal women, accounts for 20%-30% of UK gynecology outpatient appointments, and has an annual pan-European economic cost of €3.8 billion. Despite extensive investigation, often including laparoscopy, up to 55% of women do not receive a diagnosis and endure persistent symptoms. In these patients, clinical management focuses on symptom control rather than treatment. It is possible that pelvic vein incompetence (PVI) is a cause of CPP, although the quality of studies investigating an association is generally low. PVI may develop during and after pregnancy, as uterine blood flow increases significantly, pushing venous valve leaflets apart, and enabling retrograde venous flow. Analogies with varicose veins of the lower limb are helpful, and symptoms are similar. Women with symptomatic PVI report a dull pelvic ache that is worse on standing and sitting and persists throughout the day. It can be relieved by lying down. Early treatments for PVI included laparoscopic ligation; however, since the advent of endovascular occlusive techniques, treatments have lower risk and lower cost, and can be undertaken without sedation or anesthetic. However, there have been no high-quality randomized controlled trials of interventions and, therefore, the evidence is limited to single-center case series.Entities:
Keywords: chronic pelvic pain; pelvic vein incompetence; women’s health
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29225469 PMCID: PMC5708198 DOI: 10.2147/VHRM.S132827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Figure 1Venogram of incompetent left ovarian vein, pre- (A) and post-embolization (B).
Notes: a: left ovarian vein; b: characteristic dilatation of incompetent vein; c: pelvic varices; d: embolization coils in situ.
Summary of studies assessing pain scores after treatment of pelvic vein incompetence
| Author | Study type | Eligibility criteria, number of participants | Procedure | Pain outcome measure | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asciutto et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=35 | Ovarian and/or internal iliac vein embolization | Pain scores at 1–3 years | Mean pain score reduced from 5.2±3.5 to 1.2±0.9 at 3 years |
| Capasso et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=19 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain score at 4 weeks | 74% had improved pain score |
| Chung and Huh | Randomized controlled trial | Premenopausal women with idiopathic CPP n=106 | Ovarian vein embolization (49.0%) versus hysterectomy and bilateral oophorectomy (25.5%) versus hysterectomy plus unilateral oophorectomy (25.5%) | Pain scores at 3, 6 and 12 months | Mean pain score reduced from 4.5±0.9 to 3.2±0.9 in embolization group |
| Cordts et al | Case series | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=9 | Ovarian vein embolization | Symptom relief, mean follow-up 13 months | 88.9% had near-total symptom relief |
| Creton et al | Prospective observational | Pre-menopausal women with dyspareunia and or dysmenorrhea/PVI on imaging n=24 | Ovarian and/or internal iliac vein embolization | Pain scores at 45 days, 1–3 years | Mean pain score reduced from 5.5 to 1.0 at 45 days |
| d’Archambeau et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=130 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain scores at 1 year | Mean pain score reduced from 7.9 to 2.2 |
| Gandini et al | Prospective observational | Women with CPP plus PVI on imaging n=38 | Ovarian vein sclerotherapy | Pain scores at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months | Mean pain scores reduced from 7.8±1.8 to 2.7±2.8 |
| Greiner and Gilling-Smith | Observational study | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and CPP, plus lower limb varicose veins n=13 | Ovarian and internal iliac vein embolization | Clinical assessment at 4 years | Full or partial resolution of symptoms in 100% of patients |
| Kim et al | Retrospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=127 | Ovarian vein embolization (100%) plus internal iliac sclerotherapy (85%) | Pain scores at 3, 6, and annually | Mean pain score reduced from 7.6±1.8 to 2.9±2.8 at 45 months |
| Kwon et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and CPP n=67 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain scores, mean follow-up 45 months | 82% of patients reported reduction in pain symptoms |
| Laborda et al | Prospective observational | Women with CPP and varicose veins n=179 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain scores, 5 year follow-up | |
| Leal Monedero et al | Observational study | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and lower limb varicose veins n=239 | Embolization of ovarian and/or internal iliac veins, plus varicose vein treatments | Clinical assessment at 6 months | Full or partial resolution of pain in 87.0% of patients |
| Maleux et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and CPP n=41 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain scores, mean follow-up 20 months | 69% of patients reported some or total pain relief |
| Meneses et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and CPP, and undergoing surgery for recurrent varicose veins n=10 | Ovarian and/or internal iliac embolization | Pain scores at 3 months | Mean pain score reduced from 8.2 to 4.0 at 3 months |
| Pieri et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=33 | Ovarian vein sclerotherapy | Pain symptoms at 1 moth | Pain symptoms improved in 61% of patients |
| Richardson and Driver | Case series | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and CPP n=26 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain scores, mean follow-up 22 months | Mean pain score reduced from 6.6±1.9 to 4.0±2.8 |
| Scultetus et al | Prospective observational | Women with discomfort/duplex evidence of PVI n=15 | Sclerotherapy/phlebectomy of visible varices | Pain scores, mean follow-up 2–3 years | 80% reported significant improvement in pain symptoms |
| Tarazov et al | Observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=6 | Ovarian vein embolization | Pain scores, 1–4 years | 100% had complete resolution of pain |
| Tropeano et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and idiopathic CPP n=20 | Ovarian vein sclerotherapy | Pain scores at 3, 6 and 12 months | Median pain score reduced from 8.0 to 3.0 at 12 months |
| van der Vleuten et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging and CPP n=21 | Ovarian vein sclerotherapy | Pain symptoms at 2 months | 61.9% reported moderate or obvious improvement at 2 months |
| Venbrux et al | Prospective observational | Women with clinical PVI/PVI on imaging n=56 | Ovarian (in 100% of patients and internal iliac embolization (in 77%) | Pain scores at 3, 6, and 12 months | Mean pain score reduced from 7.8 at baseline to 2.7 at 12 months |
Abbreviations: CPP, chronic pelvic pain; PVI, pelvic vein incompetence.