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In this study the investigators will perform a randomized trial to compare the surgical outcomes of vaginal versus abdominal morcellation of the uterus during hysterectomy. In minimally invasive gynecologic surgery small incisions are made in the abdomen and pelvis so that a hysterectomy can be performed by laparoscopy. The challenge is then to remove the uterus, which may be quite large, through these small incisions. One option is to morcellate the uterus and remove the tissue through either a small abdominal incision or an incision in the vagina. When an organ is morcellated it is cut into smaller pieces so that it can be removed, section by section, through a small incision. The investigators will compare these two methods of tissue removal to see whether one results in better surgical outcomes or increased intra-operative or post-operative complications. The primary outcome will be the time it takes to perform the surgery (operative time). Secondary surgical outcomes that will be studied include the amount of blood lost during surgery, post-operative complications, and readmission to the hospital.
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Hysterectomy is the most commonly performed non-obstetric procedure in women in the United States, with approximately 400,000 hysterectomies performed each year. Minimally invasive techniques have all been shown to have advantages over laparotomy. These include decreased blood loss, faster recovery time, improved postoperative pain and decreased postoperative complications including wound infections, thromboembolism, iatrogenic injuries and incisional hernias. Due to all of these benefits, the volume of minimally invasive procedures has increased significantly over the last ten years making tissue extraction a widely debated topic.
Morcellation is a technique that allows large pieces of tissue to be removed through small incisions and was originally performed either with a scalpel or manual device until the first power/electric morcellators were introduced in 1993. Since then, power morcellation has made 50,000 to 150,000 minimally invasive hysterectomies possible annually. While the former has been an integral part in the treatment of women with large uteri and uterine fibroids, it has recently come under scrutiny due to multiple concerns including dissemination of undetected malignancy, development of iatrogenic myomas as well as increased number of reported complications and death. This has led the US Food and drug administration in April 2014 to issue a statement discouraging the use of laparoscopic power morcellation.
In the face of the growing bias against electronic mechanical morcellators, other approaches must be investigated and promulgated so that patients may still benefit from minimally invasive gynecologic surgeries. The two commonly used methods for tissue extraction are manual morcellation through mini-laparotomy and vaginal morcellation. In the former, a trocar site enlargement or a new up to 1 inch incision is created through which the specimen is brought to the abdominal surface and morcellated with scalpel.In the latter, tissues are removed in the same fashion but via a colpotomy. The investigators intent is to compare manual morcellation methods (vaginal vs abdominal mini-laparotomy) in order to help surgeons choose the best approach for their patient.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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