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The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether ultrasound-guided alcohol sclerotherapy can improve pelvic pain and quality of life in women aged 18 to 45 diagnosed with ovarian endometriomas, compared to expectant management.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Researchers will compare the sclerotherapy group to the expectant management group to determine whether the intervention leads to greater improvement in pain and quality of life.
Participants will:
The study will follow an intention-to-treat and per-protocol analysis approach.
Full description
Endometriosis is a chronic gynecological disease that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by the abnormal growth of endometrial tissue outside the uterine cavity.
It affects 5-10% of women of reproductive age (Becker et al., 2022) and is associated with infertility in 40% of cases (Coccia et al., 2008). Among its clinical forms, ovarian endometrioma is the most frequent, appearing in 15-45% of patients with endometriosis (Cranney et al., 2017). In addition to its impact on fertility, the main clinical manifestation of endometriosis is pain. Chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis can be disabling and even lead to work absenteeism, with a significant impact on the quality of life of affected patients, who often experience delayed diagnosis, making its management even more difficult and requiring a multidisciplinary approach (Horne & Missmer, 2022).
Currently, there is still no consensus on what should be the first-line treatment for ovarian endometrioma (Gordts & Campo, 2019). However, cystectomy reduces ovarian reserve due to the removal of healthy ovarian tissue adjacent to the cyst wall-something that further worsens the reproductive prognosis in patients whose fertility is already diminished due to endometriosis per se (Alborzi et al., 2021; Martinez-Garcia et al., 2021). Moreover, despite surgical removal of the endometrioma, the recurrence rate is high, ranging from 15-30% (Jee, 2022).
In recent years, there has been a shift toward more conservative treatments for the management of endometrioma, such as expectant management or aspiration and sclerosis (Garcia-Tejedor et al., 2020). Various authors have shown that ultrasound-guided aspiration and alcohol sclerosis may be a promising option, as concluded in the meta-analysis by Cohen et al., which found that recurrence rates were similar to those of laparoscopic management of ovarian endometrioma, but with fewer complications. Results in assisted reproductive technology are also better compared to surgical treatment in symptomatic women, particularly in those with low ovarian reserve (Zhang et al., 2022). Furthermore, other comparative studies between surgery and aspiration-sclerosis have shown that, although recurrence rates are similar, pregnancy rates are higher in patients treated with sclerosis, with the same complication rate and significantly lower costs (Garcia-Tejedor et al., 2020; Zhang et al., 2022).
Currently, the first-line treatment in patients diagnosed with endometriosis is hormonal therapy through the use of hormonal contraceptives. However, its efficacy in managing endometrioma is lower, and therefore, there is no consensus on its indication for this specific form of endometriosis (Cranney et al., 2017). In patients with a desire for pregnancy, alternative approaches are sought that do not interfere with fertility. At present, this often involves proceeding with in vitro fertilization without treating the endometrioma first, followed by surgery if needed (Miquel et al., 2020).
In addition to reproductive outcomes in patients affected by endometriosis, symptomatology and its consequent impact on quality of life have become highly relevant factors in treatment selection. Accordingly, specific pain scales and quality-of-life questionnaires have been developed to assess the impact on women affected by this condition. One such tool is the Endometriosis Health Profile scale, available in two versions (EHP-30 and EHP-5), designed by Dr. Stephen Kennedy and his team at the University of Oxford. It is a validated scale for assessing quality of life in patients with endometriosis and has been translated into nearly all languages (Jones et al., 2023; Bourdel et al., 2019).
The main objective of this project is to conduct a comparative analysis of patients diagnosed with ovarian endometrioma who undergo alcohol aspiration and sclerosis versus patients managed expectantly.
The outcomes to be evaluated include impact on quality of life, clinical improvement, pregnancy rate, and the need for subsequent surgery.
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288 participants in 2 patient groups
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Amparo Garcia-Tejedor, MDPhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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