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Nomogram for Predicting a Complex Ureteral Procedure in Pelvic Endometriosis Surgery

Authors :
Lou Donval
Julien Niro
Thomas Gaillard
Sarah Amari
Carmen Chis
Clothilde Poupon
Anne Gauthier
Pierre Panel
Source :
Journal of minimally invasive gynecology. 29(5)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To develop a nomogram for predicting the type of ureteral procedure in pelvic deep endometriosis (DE) surgery (1) and to describe the factors and complications associated with the ureteral procedure (2).Retrospective monocentric study of 920 patients who underwent surgery for pelvic DE between June 2009 and March 2020 in the gynecologic surgery department of the Versailles Hospital Center. The main criterion was evaluation of the ureteral procedure, classified as simple (isolation of the ureter) or complex (dissection of the ureter, segmental ureteral resection, or nephroureterectomy). Postoperative complications, including ureteral stenosis and fistula formation, were tabulated.Tertiary referral hospital and expert center in endometriosis.A total of 920 patients with DE.Ureteral procedure during surgery for DE.In total, 724 patients (79%) underwent a ureteral procedure, of which 307 (33%) were complex, including 17 (1.8%) segmental ureteral resections. In multivariate analysis, the predictive variables for a complex ureteral procedure were age (p = .036), a previous surgery for endometriosis (p.01), and ureteral dilatation on magnetic resonance imaging (p.001). The area under the curve for the model predicting a complex ureteral procedure was 0.68 (95% confidence interval, 0.60-0.71). A complex ureteral procedure was associated with a 3.5% rate of ureteral fistula (n = 15).Age, a previous surgery for endometriosis, a rectovaginal nodule size ≥30 mm, endometriotic involvement of the rectum or sigmoid, and ureteral dilatation are significantly associated with a complex ureteral procedure. Our results allowed us to build a nomogram that can be used to better inform patients, anticipate the therapeutic strategy, and optimize the modalities of postoperative surveillance.

Details

ISSN :
15534669
Volume :
29
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of minimally invasive gynecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2178caf4d254c7b9ee7079371b62c74f