| Literature DB >> 31845165 |
Sanne I Stegwee1, Astrid Beij2, Robert A de Leeuw2, Lidwine B Mokkink3, Lucet F van der Voet4, Judith A F Huirne5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A niche in the uterus, present in 60% of women after caesarean section (CS), is associated with several gynaecological symptoms and possibly with subfertility. Studies that focus on quality of life (QoL) in relation to a niche are lacking.Entities:
Keywords: Caesarean section; Chronic disease; Focus groups; Niche; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31845165 PMCID: PMC7142042 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-019-02376-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Focus group discussion participants’ characteristics
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Age, median (range) | 38 (30-42) |
| Number of children, mean | 2.2 |
| Number of caesarean sections, mean | 1.8 |
| Active wish to conceive | 5 (38) |
| Years since diagnosis | |
| < 2 years | 4 (31) |
| 2–4 years | 4 (31) |
| > 4 years | 5 (38) |
| Currently pregnant | 1 (8) |
| Received niche therapy | |
| Laparoscopic niche resection* | 6 (46) |
| First laparoscopic, then hysteroscopic niche resection | 3 (23) |
| Total laparoscopic hysterectomy | 3 (23) |
| Fertility treatment | |
| Fertility treatment due to niche | 5 (38) |
| Fertility treatment due to previous infertility | 0 (0) |
N = 13
Values are the number of participants with (%) unless otherwise indicated
*Performed under hysteroscopic guidance
Results from focus group discussions: the four domains with themes, outcomes and illustrative quotations
| Theme | Outcome | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Abnormal uterine bleeding | Intensity (volume and duration) of AUB | “(…), like I had during the holidays, early in the morning. I just sat on the toilet for fifteen minutes because it kept gushing.” |
| Irregularity of AUB | “It just starts at an inappropriate time, so after intercourse or when you’re just about to go to your work or ready to leave the house. And then, you’re covered in blood again.” | |
| Odour due to AUB | “I was mainly wondering: can’t everybody smell me?” | |
| Abdominal pain | (Chronic) abdominal pain | “Out of the 30 days, there might have been two days that I thought: oh, my belly doesn’t hurt for a change.” |
| Caesarean scar sensations | “Looking back, I felt the scar… I felt a bad pulling sensation in my scar, but I thought it was just part of the recovery.” | |
| Subfertility | Inability to conceive | “It doesn’t matter if it’s the first, second or third. When you’re not able to conceive anymore, that’s very intense.” |
| Pregnancy anxieties | “It was my biggest fear to get contractions | |
| Negative advice | “Yes, that’s no longer there | |
| Urological symptoms | Polyuria | “I have to pee more often at night.” |
| Painful micturition | “I feel pain during micturition or when my bladder is full.” | |
| Energy and fatigue | Not specified | “If you’re dealing with the pain all day and you have so much blood loss; that costs a lot of energy.” |
| Activities of daily living | Not specified | “(…) such heavy pain that you just need to lie in bed with a paracetamol all day |
| Work capacity | Period related | “I’m not going to say ( |
| Pregnancy related | “At 20 weeks, the doctor said: ‘your myometrium is so thin…’ So I stopped working at the gestational age of 24 weeks.” | |
| In general | “I had a job in education, and it is just not possible to combine this with a hospital life | |
| Self-esteem | Self-image | “Because I had bleedings for so long, yeah, you don’t really get clean and fresh anymore. You’re kind of disgusted by yourself.” |
| Self-doubt | “Am I crazy or is there really something going on?” | |
| Preoccupation | Not specified | “Just going a day to the beach and thinking: Oh, do I have pads with me or where is the nearest bathroom? It’s just always on your mind.“ |
| Negative feelings | Cause/blame | “Should I have done things differently? Where did it go wrong? With the CS or the IUD? Or wouldn’t it have gotten so bad, if I had reached out earlier?” |
| Loneliness or depression | “The limitations in your daily life and the loneliness in this compared to your age group.” | |
| Social support | Social acceptance | “You don’t talk about it. Who’s going to talk about periods, when you’re spending the night with friends?” |
| Unfamiliarity | “A lot of people don’t know what it is | |
| Personal relationships | Being heard | “People just don’t take you seriously when you suffer from the effects |
| Family life | “And there | |
| Incomprehension | “That’s the worst part, that my partner is okay with it. And that’s very sweet, you know, but I’m not. It’s very annoying, because it’s almost impossible for them to understand.” | |
| Sexual activity | Embarrassment | “Checking during intercourse; am I bleeding now? That’s nasty.” |
| Meet expectations | “That was the worst part for me. Of course, you’re bleeding, but you have a partner that also wants something.” | |
| Dyspareunia | “If you’re thinking: oh, it’s going to hurt, it’s going to hurt | |
| Avoiding intercourse | “My sex life is on a very low level right now.” | |
| Healthcare system | Knowledge | “Four years ago, it was all unknown as well. Why doesn’t every general practitioner know about this by now? That’s strange, right?” |
| Acknowledgement | “You’re telling your story to professionals and yet those professionals don’t really hear you. You’re being sent from pillar to post.” | |
| Lack of treatment options | “The general practitioner shouldn’t set you up with contraception pills for six times and only afterwards consider sending you to a gynaecologist.” | |
| Participation in leisure activities | Not participating in leisure activities | “In those five days |
| Discomfort during leisure activities | “When I went to the spa, I was like: let’s take a dark towel with me, because if I take a white one and something happens… | |
AUB: abnormal uterine bleeding, CS: caesarean section, IUD: intra-uterine device
Fig. 1Connection of domains and themes reported by niche patients. Size indicates relevance of the theme for QoL, with larger themes being reported more frequently or prioritised in the focus groups
Summary of outcomes reported in the literature in relation to a niche or thin lower uterine segment
| N = 11 | |
| Bleeding abnormalities | N = 10 |
| Prolonged menses [ | 2 |
| Postmenstrual spotting [ | 9 |
| Abnormal uterine bleeding (not further specified) [ | 1 |
| Pain | N = 2 |
| Dysmenorrhoea [ | 2 |
| Chronic pelvic pain [ | 2 |
| Dyspareunia [ | 1 |
| Other | N = 2 |
| Risk on failed early TOP [ | 1 |
| Urinary incontinence [ | 1 |
| N = 24 | |
| Bleeding abnormalities | N = 24 |
| Prolonged menses [ | 17 |
| Postmenstrual spotting [ | 3 |
| (Postmenstrual) abnormal uterine bleeding [ | 4 |
| Pain | N = 10 |
| Dysmenorrhoea [ | 3 |
| Abdominal pain [ | 4 |
| Dyspareunia [ | 2 |
| Pain during micturition [ | 1 |
| Pelvic pain [ | 2 |
| N = 19 | |
| Fertility related—after therapy (surgical or hormonal) | N = 8 |
| Wish to conceive [ | 4 |
| Pregnancy rate [ | 7 |
| Miscarriage rate [ | 6 |
| Caesarean scar pregnancy [ | 3 |
| Live birth rate [ | 4 |
| Obstetrics related—after therapy (surgical or hormonal) | N = 4 |
| Mode and/or timing of delivery [ | 2 |
| Risk of abnormal adhesive placenta [ | 1 |
| Risk of uterine dehiscence/rupture [ | 3 |
| Obstetrics related—no treatment | N = 12 |
| Risk of abnormal adhesive placenta [ | 2 |
| Association US and risk of uterine dehiscence/rupture [ | 9 |
| Association US and % successful VBAC [ | 4 |
| N = 3 | |
| Quality of life (SF-36) [ | 3 |
| Sexuality (FSFI) [ | 1 |
N: number of articles, TOP: termination of pregnancy, LUS: lower uterine segment, US: ultrasound, VBAC: vaginal birth after caesarean, SF-36: Short Form 36-item Health Survey, FSFI: Female Sexual Functioning Index
Fig. 2Discrepancies and similarities in themes reported by patients and in the literature. Size indicates relevance in focus group discussions or frequency of reporting in the literature, with larger themes being reported more often