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This is a prospective, multicentric (two centers: 1:San Raffaele Scientific institute, Milan, Italy; 2:Jagiellonian University, Collegium Medicum, Cracow, Poland), randomized (1:1) clinical trial that includes patients undergoing surgery for primary unilateral or bilateral symptomatic endometriomas.
The aim of the study is to determine whether and to what extent the two surgical procedures for endometrioma, cystectomy and laser vaporization, affect ovarian reserve. Recently, cystectomy has been questioned as an ideal surgical approach because it may involve excessive removal of ovarian tissue and the loss of follicles; laser vaporization has been proposed as a promising method to preserve ovarian function.
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Excisional surgery is the recommended treatment for ovarian endometrioma because of higher pregnancy rate and lower recurrence rate compared with ablative techniques. From the standpoint of ovarian reserve, the efficiency of cystectomy remains a topic of considerable debate: in recent years, cystectomy has been questioned as an ideal surgical approach for endometriomas because it is associated with excessive removal of ovarian tissue and loss of ovarian follicles with subsequent reduction of ovarian reserve. According to a recent report, absence of follicular growth was observed in 13% of operated ovaries, although this event never occurred in the contralateral gonad.
In San Raffaele Scientific Institute, fear of ovarian failure after cystectomy resulted in the introduction of an ablative technique involving CO2 laser technology, which posses the ability to deliver energy with little thermal spread. More than 80 patients were treated with CO2 laser at this Institution during three-year experience. This surgical procedure was inspired by the one employed by Jacques Donnez for more than 20 years, in which CO2 laser is used to ablate endometriomas' inner wall, after 3-months GnRHa therapy. Laser vaporization, according to the ''three-step procedure", has also been proposed as the best method to preserve ovarian function; moreover, reassuring data on the rate of long-term recurrence after laser vaporization have recently been published.
However, no data are available about the single use of CO2 laser fiber vaporization (without GnRHa therapy) with respect to the ovarian reserve.
Since 2015, the investigators have continuously evaluated the benefits of CO2 laser vaporization through a clinical trial assessing the postoperative changes in ovarian reserve as indicated by antral follicle count (AFC) and anti-mullerian hormone (AMH); the results of this pilot study support the positive effects of CO2 laser on ovarian reserve as demonstrated by higher AFC and no change in AMH at 3-month follow-up. In order to provide more conclusive data about the potential advantage of CO2 laser ablation with respect to ovarian cystectomy in terms of fertility outcomes a prospective randomized trial has been planned; the aim of this prospective randomized study is to determine whether and to what extent the two surgical procedures for ovarian endometrioma (cystectomy versus C02 laser vaporization) affect ovarian reserve.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Jessica Ottolina, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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