Unresolved debate on surgery for deep infiltrating endometriosis of the rectum: bowel resection or a more conservative approach?

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 SURGERY ANZ Journal of Surgery Pub Date : 2024-06-14 DOI:10.1111/ans.19134
Joseph Do Woong Choi FRACS, Hillary Hu FRANZCOG, Amy Cao FRACS, Nimalan Pathma-Nathan FRACS, James Wei Tatt Toh FACS, FRACS, PhD
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This involves rectal shaving, disc excision or segmental resection.<span><sup>6</sup></span> There is no clear consensus as to the optimal technique for achieving symptom control and fertility in patients with DIE.<span><sup>7</sup></span> This is in part due to varying surgical techniques particularly with heterogeneity of definitions for rectal shaving, as well as results and complications.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>There are studies advocating for a more conservative approach. In a series of 3298 patients, only 1.1% of rectal DIE cases met criteria for bowel resection.<span><sup>9, 10</sup></span> These include major symptomatic rectal stenosis, multiple nodules infiltrating the rectosigmoid junction not amenable to serial shaving or disc excision, or extensive circumferential or posterior rectal lesions where shaving or disc excision is not feasible.<span><sup>11</sup></span> While conservative surgery was traditionally appropriate for DIE &lt;3 cm,<span><sup>12</sup></span> Donnez and Roman found that shaving can be safely performed up to 6 cm in size, and the Rouen disc excision technique allowed for removal of rectal nodules &gt;5 cm in diameter with good functional outcomes.<span><sup>11, 13</sup></span> Shaving alone may be performed if the nodule can be easily separated from the anterior rectum to reach the cleavage plane of the rectovaginal septum, while disc excision may be preferred for mid to low rectal nodules where shaving may be technically difficult.<span><sup>11</sup></span> They concluded that the size of the nodule should not dictate the need for rectal resection, and that the majority of DIE did not require major bowel resection. This is important, as the complication rate is significantly lower with a conservative approach: 2.2–5.7% after shaving, 9.7% after disc excision and 9.9% after segmental resection.<span><sup>14</sup></span> However, it is advised that these techniques, particularly for larger DIE nodules be performed in centres of expertise within a multidisciplinary setting.<span><sup>7, 14</sup></span></p><p>A meta-analysis found lower bowel perforation rate, intraoperative haemorrhage, anastomotic leak and rectovaginal fistula rate after rectal shaving compared to segmental resection.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Disc excision was associated with lower rates of anastomotic stenosis, and that segmental resection was associated with significant risk of bowel stenosis requiring additional endoscopic or surgical intervention.<span><sup>14, 15</sup></span> Also, the mean duration of the procedure was longer for segmental resection (151 ± 56.3 min), than for disc excision (111.5 ± 38.2 min) and shaving (96.8 ± 48.7 min).<span><sup>16</sup></span></p><p>Donnez and Roman reported higher complication rates after rectal resection for urinary retention (0%–17.5%), anastomotic leakage (0%–4.8%) and pelvic abscesses (0%–4.2%) compared to rectal shaving.<span><sup>11</sup></span> The rates of rectovaginal fistulas were higher after both rectal resection (0%–18.1%) and disc excision (0%–11.6%) compared to shaving (0%–2.3%).<span><sup>11</sup></span> The risk of rectovaginal fistulas was up to 18% when rectal resection was performed for DIE close to the anal verge.<span><sup>17, 18</sup></span> In a series of 1135 cases requiring surgery for DIE, the total stoma rate was 19.1%.<span><sup>19</sup></span> There was no breakdown of stoma rates between the three types of surgery, however they commented that use of stoma was more frequent in facilities with higher rates of colorectal resection, suggesting that protective stoma was not commonly performed after rectal shaving.<span><sup>19</sup></span></p><p>Quality of life (QOL) aspects of surgery is another important consideration. A prospective study involving 82 patients studied SF-36 scores (domains: pain, physical function, physical and emotional limitations, vitality, mental health, social, general health) before and after DIE surgery.<span><sup>20</sup></span> They found that all SF-36 domains in the rectal surgery group had significantly poorer scores than patients without rectal surgery at 6–12 months after surgery except for physical function (<i>P</i> = 0.06) and emotional limitations (<i>P</i> = 0.26). Additionally, no significant differences in the SF-36 scores were found comparing rectal shave, disc excision and segmental resection 1 year after surgery.<span><sup>20</sup></span> This was also echoed in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) where there were no differences in functional outcomes and pregnancy after 5 and 7 years between shaving or disc excision versus segmental resection.<span><sup>15, 21, 22</sup></span> Two case series reported significant improvement in gastrointestinal QOL after rectal shaving at 1 and 3 years postoperatively.<span><sup>23, 24</sup></span> A meta-analysis found that conservative surgery presented fewer events of constipation and diarrhoea than segmental resection.<span><sup>6</sup></span> In addition, temporary bladder catheterisation rate after rectal shaving was reported to be 0.19%, compared to persistent urinary retention rate of 1.4%–17.5% after rectal resection likely related to bladder atony from hypogastric plexus injury.<span><sup>9, 23, 25, 26</sup></span></p><p>There is improved sexual QOL in the rectal shaving group, compared to segmental resection.<span><sup>27, 28</sup></span> On the other hand, while Low Anterior Resection Syndrome (LARS) questionnaires did not demonstrate a difference between rectal shaving, disc excision versus segmental resection, endometriosis confounds LARS symptoms, as patients had major and minor LARS symptoms preoperatively.<span><sup>27-29</sup></span></p><p>There are studies that support segmental resection for DIE. These include ENDORE, a RCT assessing functional outcomes in 60 patients, which did not demonstrate differences in urinary and digestive improvements from conservative versus radical surgery.<span><sup>30</sup></span> A meta-analysis with 1600 patients quoted a proven endometriosis recurrence rate of 2.5% in the bowel resection group, compared to 5.7% in the mixed surgical group that included rectal shaving and disc excision.<span><sup>31</sup></span> Advocates for radical surgery argue that conservative surgery results in higher risk of recurrence in DIE. The rates of residual microscopic endometriosis was reported as high as 40% with disc excision.<span><sup>32-35</sup></span></p><p>On the other hand, bowel resection for DIE may be associated with positive bowel margins for endometriosis up to 15%, with a risk of recurrent endometriosis symptoms.<span><sup>32-35</sup></span> Furthermore, data on recurrence rates were based on short follow-up periods (2–4 years).<span><sup>31, 36</sup></span> Thus, it is unclear if bowel resection provides any long-term advantage in terms of DIE recurrence. In any case, the reintervention rate was found to be &lt;10% in three studies,<span><sup>9, 26, 37</sup></span> so the risk of recurrence needs to be balanced with the risk of bowel resection. Interestingly, a recent RCT for rectal DIE did not demonstrate differences in recurrence rate or reoperation risk between segmental resection versus shave or disc excision after 7 years followup.<span><sup>22</sup></span> Thus, this further supports less invasive surgery for DIE.</p><p>With the increasing armamentarium of combined hormonal contraceptives (CHC), levonorgesterel-releasing intra-uterine system (LNG-IUS), Dienogest or Gonadatrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists (Triptorelin or Leuprorelin) that may be used postoperatively to further reduce the risk of recurrence and persistent pain,<span><sup>38-41</sup></span> conservative surgery may be a less risky alternative to segmental bowel resection for DIE. Bowel resection for DIE of the rectum should be reserved for major symptomatic rectal stenosis, or where it is not safe or appropriate for shaving or disc excision. Rectal resection for DIE should not be the norm, but the exception.</p><p><b>Joseph Do Woong Choi:</b> Data curation; formal analysis; investigation; methodology; project administration; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. <b>Hillary Hu:</b> Formal analysis; investigation; validation; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. <b>Amy Cao:</b> Formal analysis; supervision; validation; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. <b>Nimalan Pathma-Nathan:</b> Conceptualization; formal analysis; methodology; supervision; validation; writing – review and editing. <b>James Wei Tatt Toh:</b> Conceptualization; formal analysis; investigation; methodology; supervision; validation; writing – review and editing.</p>","PeriodicalId":8158,"journal":{"name":"ANZ Journal of Surgery","volume":"94 11","pages":"1901-1903"},"PeriodicalIF":1.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/ans.19134","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ANZ Journal of Surgery","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ans.19134","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"SURGERY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE) of the bowel, defined by infiltration of endometriosis into the muscularis propria, or as a lesion invading the bowel wall >5 mm depth, occurs in 5.2%–12% of women with endometriosis.1, 2 The rectum and the distal sigmoid colon are most commonly involved.3, 4 Rectal involvement may cause angulation or stricture of the bowel, causing defecatory pain and constipation.5 Cyclical inflammation of the rectal endometriosis may lead to diarrhoea, pelvic pain and rectal bleeding.5

With the advancements in minimally invasive surgery, there is an increasing trend to recommend surgery for rectal DIE. This involves rectal shaving, disc excision or segmental resection.6 There is no clear consensus as to the optimal technique for achieving symptom control and fertility in patients with DIE.7 This is in part due to varying surgical techniques particularly with heterogeneity of definitions for rectal shaving, as well as results and complications.8

There are studies advocating for a more conservative approach. In a series of 3298 patients, only 1.1% of rectal DIE cases met criteria for bowel resection.9, 10 These include major symptomatic rectal stenosis, multiple nodules infiltrating the rectosigmoid junction not amenable to serial shaving or disc excision, or extensive circumferential or posterior rectal lesions where shaving or disc excision is not feasible.11 While conservative surgery was traditionally appropriate for DIE <3 cm,12 Donnez and Roman found that shaving can be safely performed up to 6 cm in size, and the Rouen disc excision technique allowed for removal of rectal nodules >5 cm in diameter with good functional outcomes.11, 13 Shaving alone may be performed if the nodule can be easily separated from the anterior rectum to reach the cleavage plane of the rectovaginal septum, while disc excision may be preferred for mid to low rectal nodules where shaving may be technically difficult.11 They concluded that the size of the nodule should not dictate the need for rectal resection, and that the majority of DIE did not require major bowel resection. This is important, as the complication rate is significantly lower with a conservative approach: 2.2–5.7% after shaving, 9.7% after disc excision and 9.9% after segmental resection.14 However, it is advised that these techniques, particularly for larger DIE nodules be performed in centres of expertise within a multidisciplinary setting.7, 14

A meta-analysis found lower bowel perforation rate, intraoperative haemorrhage, anastomotic leak and rectovaginal fistula rate after rectal shaving compared to segmental resection.14 Disc excision was associated with lower rates of anastomotic stenosis, and that segmental resection was associated with significant risk of bowel stenosis requiring additional endoscopic or surgical intervention.14, 15 Also, the mean duration of the procedure was longer for segmental resection (151 ± 56.3 min), than for disc excision (111.5 ± 38.2 min) and shaving (96.8 ± 48.7 min).16

Donnez and Roman reported higher complication rates after rectal resection for urinary retention (0%–17.5%), anastomotic leakage (0%–4.8%) and pelvic abscesses (0%–4.2%) compared to rectal shaving.11 The rates of rectovaginal fistulas were higher after both rectal resection (0%–18.1%) and disc excision (0%–11.6%) compared to shaving (0%–2.3%).11 The risk of rectovaginal fistulas was up to 18% when rectal resection was performed for DIE close to the anal verge.17, 18 In a series of 1135 cases requiring surgery for DIE, the total stoma rate was 19.1%.19 There was no breakdown of stoma rates between the three types of surgery, however they commented that use of stoma was more frequent in facilities with higher rates of colorectal resection, suggesting that protective stoma was not commonly performed after rectal shaving.19

Quality of life (QOL) aspects of surgery is another important consideration. A prospective study involving 82 patients studied SF-36 scores (domains: pain, physical function, physical and emotional limitations, vitality, mental health, social, general health) before and after DIE surgery.20 They found that all SF-36 domains in the rectal surgery group had significantly poorer scores than patients without rectal surgery at 6–12 months after surgery except for physical function (P = 0.06) and emotional limitations (P = 0.26). Additionally, no significant differences in the SF-36 scores were found comparing rectal shave, disc excision and segmental resection 1 year after surgery.20 This was also echoed in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) where there were no differences in functional outcomes and pregnancy after 5 and 7 years between shaving or disc excision versus segmental resection.15, 21, 22 Two case series reported significant improvement in gastrointestinal QOL after rectal shaving at 1 and 3 years postoperatively.23, 24 A meta-analysis found that conservative surgery presented fewer events of constipation and diarrhoea than segmental resection.6 In addition, temporary bladder catheterisation rate after rectal shaving was reported to be 0.19%, compared to persistent urinary retention rate of 1.4%–17.5% after rectal resection likely related to bladder atony from hypogastric plexus injury.9, 23, 25, 26

There is improved sexual QOL in the rectal shaving group, compared to segmental resection.27, 28 On the other hand, while Low Anterior Resection Syndrome (LARS) questionnaires did not demonstrate a difference between rectal shaving, disc excision versus segmental resection, endometriosis confounds LARS symptoms, as patients had major and minor LARS symptoms preoperatively.27-29

There are studies that support segmental resection for DIE. These include ENDORE, a RCT assessing functional outcomes in 60 patients, which did not demonstrate differences in urinary and digestive improvements from conservative versus radical surgery.30 A meta-analysis with 1600 patients quoted a proven endometriosis recurrence rate of 2.5% in the bowel resection group, compared to 5.7% in the mixed surgical group that included rectal shaving and disc excision.31 Advocates for radical surgery argue that conservative surgery results in higher risk of recurrence in DIE. The rates of residual microscopic endometriosis was reported as high as 40% with disc excision.32-35

On the other hand, bowel resection for DIE may be associated with positive bowel margins for endometriosis up to 15%, with a risk of recurrent endometriosis symptoms.32-35 Furthermore, data on recurrence rates were based on short follow-up periods (2–4 years).31, 36 Thus, it is unclear if bowel resection provides any long-term advantage in terms of DIE recurrence. In any case, the reintervention rate was found to be <10% in three studies,9, 26, 37 so the risk of recurrence needs to be balanced with the risk of bowel resection. Interestingly, a recent RCT for rectal DIE did not demonstrate differences in recurrence rate or reoperation risk between segmental resection versus shave or disc excision after 7 years followup.22 Thus, this further supports less invasive surgery for DIE.

With the increasing armamentarium of combined hormonal contraceptives (CHC), levonorgesterel-releasing intra-uterine system (LNG-IUS), Dienogest or Gonadatrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists (Triptorelin or Leuprorelin) that may be used postoperatively to further reduce the risk of recurrence and persistent pain,38-41 conservative surgery may be a less risky alternative to segmental bowel resection for DIE. Bowel resection for DIE of the rectum should be reserved for major symptomatic rectal stenosis, or where it is not safe or appropriate for shaving or disc excision. Rectal resection for DIE should not be the norm, but the exception.

Joseph Do Woong Choi: Data curation; formal analysis; investigation; methodology; project administration; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. Hillary Hu: Formal analysis; investigation; validation; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. Amy Cao: Formal analysis; supervision; validation; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing. Nimalan Pathma-Nathan: Conceptualization; formal analysis; methodology; supervision; validation; writing – review and editing. James Wei Tatt Toh: Conceptualization; formal analysis; investigation; methodology; supervision; validation; writing – review and editing.

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关于直肠深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症手术的未决争论:肠切除术还是更保守的方法?
肠道深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症(DIE)是指子宫内膜异位症浸润到固有肌层,或病变侵入肠壁 5 毫米深,发生于 5.2%-12%的子宫内膜异位症妇女、4 直肠受累可能导致肠道成角或狭窄,引起排便疼痛和便秘。5 直肠子宫内膜异位症的周期性炎症可能导致腹泻、盆腔疼痛和直肠出血。7 部分原因是手术技术各不相同,特别是直肠切除术的定义、效果和并发症都不尽相同。在一系列 3298 例患者中,只有 1.1%的直肠 DIE 病例符合肠切除标准。9, 10 这些标准包括有症状的直肠大狭窄、浸润直肠乙状结肠交界处的多发结节无法进行连续剃除或椎间盘切除,或直肠周缘或后部病变广泛,无法进行剃除或椎间盘切除。传统上,保守手术适用于直径为 3 厘米的 DIE,12 但 Donnez 和 Roman 发现,可以安全地对直径达 6 厘米的结节进行剃除,而 Rouen 盘状切除术可以切除直径为 5 厘米的直肠结节,并取得良好的功能性效果、13 如果结节可以很容易地从直肠前部分离,到达直肠阴道隔的裂隙面,则可以单独进行剃除,而对于中低部位的直肠结节,剃除可能在技术上有困难,因此盘状切除术可能是首选。这一点很重要,因为保守方法的并发症发生率明显较低:刮除术后为 2.2%-5.7%,盘状切除术后为 9.7%,节段切除术后为 9.9%、14 一项荟萃分析发现,与分段切除术相比,直肠剃除术后肠穿孔率、术中出血、吻合口漏和直肠阴道瘘发生率较低、16Donnez 和 Roman 报道,与直肠刮除相比,直肠切除术后尿潴留(0%-17.5%)、吻合口漏(0%-4.8%)和盆腔脓肿(0%-4.2%)的并发症发生率更高。与剃除术(0%-2.3%)相比,直肠切除术(0%-18.1%)和椎间盘切除术(0%-11.6%)后直肠阴道瘘的发生率更高、18 在一系列 1135 例需要手术治疗 DIE 的病例中,总造口率为 19.1%。19 没有对三种手术类型的造口率进行细分,但他们评论说,在结肠直肠切除率较高的机构中,造口的使用更为频繁,这表明在直肠剃除术后进行保护性造口并不常见。一项涉及 82 名患者的前瞻性研究对 DIE 手术前后的 SF-36 评分(领域:疼痛、身体功能、身体和情感限制、活力、心理健康、社交、一般健康)进行了研究20 。他们发现,在术后 6-12 个月,直肠手术组患者的所有 SF-36 领域评分均明显低于未接受直肠手术的患者,但身体功能(P = 0.06)和情感限制(P = 0.26)除外。此外,直肠剃除、椎间盘切除和节段切除术术后 1 年的 SF-36 评分比较没有发现明显差异。20 一项随机对照试验(RCT)也证实了这一点,剃除或椎间盘切除术与节段切除术在 5 年和 7 年后的功能结果和妊娠方面没有差异。
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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来源期刊
ANZ Journal of Surgery
ANZ Journal of Surgery 医学-外科
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
11.80%
发文量
720
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: ANZ Journal of Surgery is published by Wiley on behalf of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons to provide a medium for the publication of peer-reviewed original contributions related to clinical practice and/or research in all fields of surgery and related disciplines. It also provides a programme of continuing education for surgeons. All articles are peer-reviewed by at least two researchers expert in the field of the submitted paper.
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