Unexpected Pathology During Pelvic Organ Prolapse Repair in an Urban Population.

IF 0.8 Q4 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Johanna Gandelsman-Ginis, Stephanie Bentley, Fareesa Khan, Cynthia Brincat, Michele O'Shea
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Abstract

Importance: This study quantifies the occult pathology risk among our urogynecologic patient population and highlights the importance of preoperative counseling, particularly in patients who have been underrepresented in prior studies.

Objective: The aim of the study was to estimate unexpected gynecologic pathology incidence among a low-risk, racially, and ethnically representative patient population undergoing surgery for symptomatic pelvic organ (POP) prolapse.

Study design: This was a retrospective study of patients undergoing hysterectomy for POP at an urban academic medical center. Patients with abnormal preoperative pathologic evaluation were excluded. Data were abstracted from the electronic health record, including demographic and clinical history, preoperative laboratory evaluation, and clinical risk factors for gynecologic malignancy.

Results: Two hundred ninety-nine nononcologic patients who underwent POP repair with hysterectomy were assessed. Thirty-six percent of patients identified as Hispanic, 17% as non-Hispanic Black, and 38% as non-Hispanic White. Twenty-three percent of patients reported abnormal uterine bleeding, 36% underwent a preoperative ultrasound examination, and 15% underwent endometrial biopsy. Two patients (0.9%) were diagnosed with endometrial carcinoma. Two patients (0.9%) were diagnosed with cervical dysplasia. No patients with concurrent oophorectomy or salpingectomy had ovarian or tubal pathology. The overall incidence of unexpected gynecologic pathology at the time of hysterectomy for prolapse was 1.7%.

Conclusions: The rate of endometrial cancer in our cohort is on the higher end of previously published data, although absolute rates of unanticipated malignancy remain low. Future studies should examine the pathological findings of larger, racially, and ethnically diverse cohorts of patients undergoing POP surgery with hysterectomy, which can aid in providing relevant estimates for preoperative counseling.

城市人口盆腔脏器脱垂修复过程中的意外病变
重要性:本研究量化了泌尿妇科患者群体中的隐匿性病变风险,并强调了术前咨询的重要性,尤其是针对在以往研究中代表性不足的患者:该研究旨在估算因症状性盆腔器官(POP)脱垂而接受手术的低风险、具有种族和民族代表性的患者群体中意外妇科病变的发生率:这是一项回顾性研究,研究对象是在一家城市学术医疗中心接受子宫切除术治疗 POP 的患者。不包括术前病理评估异常的患者。数据摘自电子健康记录,包括人口统计学和临床病史、术前实验室评估以及妇科恶性肿瘤的临床风险因素:对 299 名接受 POP 修复术和子宫切除术的非肿瘤患者进行了评估。36%的患者为西班牙裔,17%为非西班牙裔黑人,38%为非西班牙裔白人。23%的患者报告有异常子宫出血,36%的患者接受了术前超声波检查,15%的患者接受了子宫内膜活检。两名患者(0.9%)被确诊为子宫内膜癌。两名患者(0.9%)被确诊为宫颈发育不良。没有同时进行输卵管切除术或输卵管切除术的患者出现卵巢或输卵管病变。因子宫脱垂而进行子宫切除术时,意外妇科病变的总发生率为1.7%:结论:我们队列中的子宫内膜癌发生率与之前公布的数据相比偏高,但意外恶性肿瘤的绝对发生率仍然很低。未来的研究应该对接受子宫切除术的更大规模、种族和民族多样化的 POP 手术患者群体的病理结果进行检查,这有助于为术前咨询提供相关的估计值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.80
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