{"paper_id":"929780e9-ba03-4d27-a3e8-b4e4d5e3669a","body_text":"The methods, reported in detail elsewhere ( 18 ), are summarized here.\nThe GSWH is a cross-sectional study in 16 hospitals in 10 countries. Between August 2008 and January 2010, we prospectively recruited consecutive premenopausal women, aged 18–45 years, scheduled for a laparoscopy: 1) to investigate endometriosis-associated pelvic pain (i.e., chronic pelvic pain (CPP), dysmenorrhoea, pain during or after intercourse), and/or subfertility, with or without pelvic mass; or 2) to be sterilized. Women with previous surgical diagnosis of endometriosis were excluded. The Mid and South Buckinghamshire Research Ethics Committee and local Ethics Committees approved the study.\nIn the week before surgery, women completed a 67-item questionnaire in their own language about presenting complaints and their effect on HRQoL and ability to function, medical history, reproductive factors, and health care resource use ( http://www.endometriosisfoundation.org/GSWH-questionnaire-English.pdf ). Experienced gynecologists recorded laparoscopic findings in a standard manner ( http://www.endometriosisfoundation.org/GSWH-surgical-sheet.pdf ). Following European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) guidelines, endometriosis was diagnosed on visual evidence alone ( 1 ). Disease severity was staged using the revised American Fertility Society (rAFS) classification: I (minimal), II (mild), III (moderate), or IV (severe) ( 19 ). Stages I/II and III/IV were amalgamated in analyses, as in earlier studies ( 20 ,  21 ).\nValidated language versions of the Short Form–36 version 2 (SF36v2) questionnaire were used to measure HRQoL ( 22 ). A general health version of the Work Productivity and Activity Impairment (WPAI:GH) questionnaire ( 23 ) was incorporated to: 1) assess absenteeism and presenteeism in symptomatic employed women; and 2) assess the impact of symptoms on activities. We, as others have ( 24 ), used a 4-week assessment period instead of the original 7 days, because the week before surgery may not reflect true work patterns and endometriosis-associated symptoms fluctuate cyclically. Work productivity and other activities were measured on a 0 (“symptoms had no effect on work”) to 10 (“symptoms completely prevented working”) scale.\nThere were three outcome groups: 1) Women with endometriosis (including disease found at sterilisation); 2) symptomatic control women without endometriosis; and 3) sterilization control women without endometriosis. Comparisons were also made across sites (centers), with those that recruited ≤25 women combined into an “other” center. See  Supplemental Material 1  (available online at  www.fertstert.org ) for methods regarding characteristics of the study population at recruitment and the care-seeking experience.\nFor each SF36v2 dimension, item scores were coded, summed, and transformed on a 0–100 (worst to best possible health state) scale; missing data were not substituted. The physical health (PCS) and mental health (MCS) component summaries were calculated, standardized to normative data from the Third Oxford Health and Lifestyles Survey ( 25 ) ( Supplemental Material 2 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nThe WPAI:GH dimensions were calculated by recruitment centre and outcome group using standard methods ( 23 ) ( Supplemental Material 3 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ). Lost hours multiplied by 2007 hourly labour cost ( 26 ) produced estimates of the cost of work productivity loss for countries.\nWe used chi-square analyses and Fisher’exact tests to study categoric variables in the Stata program (v.11). We investigated continuous variables using independent-sample  t  test or nonparametric Mann-Whitney  U  test as appropriate. Multiple logistic and linear regression analyses were used to study associations between variables and outcomes, adjusting for potential confounders independently associated with exposure and outcome of interest in univariate analysis.  P  values of <.05 were considered nominally significant.\n\nIn total, 1,486 (89%) of 1,669 eligible women agreed to participate. Fifty-two had not undergone surgery by the close of recruitment, and 16 did not meet inclusion criteria, leaving complete data for 1,418 women ( Supplemental Fig. 1 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nEndometriosis was found in 745/1,418 (cumulative diagnostic incidence 52.5%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 49.9%–55.1%), ranging from 34.8% (95% CI 28.3–41.2%) in Oxford to 100% in Siena. Diagnostic incidence was 54.3% (699/1,287, 95% CI 51.6%–57%) among women undergoing laparoscopy for symptoms and 35.1% (46/131, 95% CI 26.9–43.3%) in those being sterilized. Among affected women, 60.5% (95% CI 57%–64%) had moderate/severe disease. Of the 46 affected women undergoing sterilization, 25 (54.3%, 95% CI 40.0%–68.7%) had moderate/severe disease ( Supplemental Fig. 2 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nCompared with symptomatic control women ( Table 1 ), affected women had higher educational achievement ( P =.004) and lower body mass index (BMI;  P <.001) and were less likely to be married or cohabiting ( P =.002) ( Table 1 ;  Supplemental Material 4 ;  Supplemental Table 1 ).\nDiagnostic delay was 6.7 years (SD 6.3) in affected women and 5.9 years (SD 6.0) in symptomatic control women ( P =.017). This was mainly due to delays in referral from primary care physician to gynecologist, with women reporting an average of seven visits before specialist referral. After adjusting for demographic factors, type of presenting symptoms, severity of pelvic pain, and comorbidity, delay was longer in women with higher BMI ( P =.040) and more “pelvic” symptoms ( P <.001;  Supplemental Table 2 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nDiagnostic delay varied across centers: 3.3 years (SD 3.6) in Guangzhou to 10.7 years (SD 9.3) in Siena ( Fig. 1 ). After adjustment for potential confounders (site, demographic differences, BMI, symptom type and severity, and comorbidity), it was significantly longer in centers with predominantly state-funded (8.3 years, 95% CI 7.5–9.0) compared with self- or insurance-funded (5.5 years, 95% CI 5.1–5.9) health care ( P =.001;  Fig. 1 ).\nCompared with both symptomatic and sterilization control women, mean HRQoL scores in affected women were poorest in all SF36v2 dimensions except physical functioning. After adjusting for relevant covariates (demographic factors, pelvic pain severity, type and number of presenting symptoms, and comorbidity), affected women had significantly reduced HRQoL compared with symptomatic control women in physical functioning ( P =.02), physical ( P =.013) and mental ( P =.022) role limitation, and bodily pain ( P =.039;  Fig. 2 ). Compared with sterilization control women, affected women had significantly poorer HRQoL only in bodily pain ( P =.024). Symptomatic control women and affected women had lower PCS scores, and all three outcome groups had lower MCS scores, than the normative population; compared with symptomatic controls, affected women had significantly reduced PCS but not MCS scores ( Fig. 2 ;  Supplemental Fig. 3 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nHRQoL was higher in women whowere in paid or self-employment ( P <.001) and who did not report any pelvic pain ( P =.017), but lower in those who had more severe pelvic pain ( P <.001). After adjusting for site (center), health care funding, pelvic pain, subfertility, severity of pelvic pain, and number of “pelvic” and “bowel” symptoms reported, longer diagnostic delays were associated with reduced physical HRQoL in affected women ( P =.047;  Supplemental Material 5 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nSee  Supplemental Material 6  (available online at  www.fertstert.org ) for more. Affected women reported greater absenteeism and presenteeism compared with symptomatic control women ( Table 2 ): Overall work productivity loss was 10.8 h/wk (SD 12.2) versus 8.4 h/wk (SD 10.2), respectively ( P <.001;  Table 2 ).\nIn multivariate analyses, overall work productivity loss in employed women was greater in those with pelvic pain without subfertility ( P =.030) and more severe pelvic pain ( P <.001) and less in those who had higher educational attainment ( P =.032). After adjusting for educational attainment, marital status, type and number of symptoms, pelvic pain severity, and comorbidity, we found that absenteeism ( P =.019), presenteeism ( P =.033) and overall work productivity loss ( P =.014) increased with increasing disease severity ( Supplemental Fig. 4 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\nAbsenteeism-related costs ranged from US$1/wk in Nigeria to US$231/wk in Italy; presenteeism costs ranged from US$3/wk in Nigeria to US$250/wk in the USA ( Supplemental Fig. 5 , available online at  www.fertstert.org ).\n\nPatient groups have advocated that endometriosis is associated with diagnostic delay, reduced quality of life, and loss of work productivity. However, past studies, mainly in Western countries, are limited by small sample sizes ( 9 ,  12 ), suboptimal control selection ( 10 ), lack of geographic spread ( 11 ), and potential recall bias. Using robust quantitative methods, the GSWH is the first to demonstrate the substantial impact of endometriosis on women and society across different countries and ethnicities. These data have never been available in most of the participating countries.\nWe found an average diagnostic delay of 6.7 years (consistent with earlier U.K. and U.S. reports ( 27 – 29 ). Delay was longer in women with more “pelvic” symptoms (e.g., CPP, dysmenorrhoea, and dyspareunia) and a higher BMI, and at centers delivering predominantly state-funded health care. We showed that delays are strongly associated with care-seeking experiences in primary care, as previously suggested ( 30 ,  31 ), but we do not exclude other reasons. For example, women may delay seeking help because of the “discrediting” nature of menstrual irregularities and risk of stigmatization ( 27 ,  32 ).\nAn association between higher BMI and diagnostic delay is recognized in other diseases ( 33 ,  34 ); in endometriosis it may arise because of difficulty detecting pathology on pelvic examination. The association between diagnostic delay and health care funding in endometriosis is novel, although similar findings are reported in cancer patients ( 35 ). Rationing of health care and differences in readiness of clinicians to suggest surgery in private- versus public-funded health care settings are possible explanations but other influences, such as negative experiences of primary care consultations, cannot be excluded ( 31 ).\nThe effect of endometriosis on physical (but not mental) HRQoL of women was substantial, with SF36v2 PCS scores similar to those reported in women with cancer ( 36 ). The effect was less if women were employed and free of pelvic pain, and worse with severe pelvic pain and advanced disease. Notably, even after adjusting for covariates, such as pain severity and comorbidity, bodily pain, health perception, and PCS scores were significantly reduced in those with moderate/severe compared with minimal/mild disease.\nWe demonstrated that pelvic pain and disease severity are the major drivers of work productivity loss in endometriosis. Although reduced effectiveness at work is less frequently assessed and recorded than work absence, it accounted for nearly 60% of total work productivity loss. The annual costs (per employed woman) of endometriosis-associated work productivity loss (varying from US$208 in Nigeria to US$23,712 in Italy), is markedly higher than earlier estimates (direct costs US$2,801 and indirect costs US$1,023 in the U.S.) ( 14 ,  15 ), but those studies only considered absenteeism.\nThe greater impairment in HRQoL (particularly bodily pain) and work productivity in moderate/severe versus minimal/mild disease, after accounting for pelvic pain severity and comorbid conditions, is intriguing and could have a number of causes. Despite careful adjustment, there might still be residual differences in symptom severity or differential reporting of comorbid conditions in case subjects and symptomatic control subjects, but we would expect these to affect mental as well as physical dimensions, which was not the case. An alternative explanation is the role of central sensitization. This theory, supported by experiments in animals and humans ( 37 – 39 ), suggests that persistent pain stimuli, generated by endometriotic tissue as disease advances, results over time in heightened pain awareness even from regions removed from the tissue itself. If true, such heightened awareness could explain the impact of worsening endometriosis on HRQoL and work productivity.\nAlthough the GSWH was designed to avoid many of the methodologic limitations of earlier studies, it had important potential limitations itself. First, HRQoL and work productivity in the weeks leading up to scheduled surgery may be affected by both the impending surgery and the symptoms themselves. This is perhaps reflected in the reduced SF36v2 summary scores in sterilization control subjects compared with general population standards. However, because women in all groups were undergoing surgery, its effect on comparing results between case and control groups should be negligible. Second, work loss data were self-reported. Although an independent measure of employment would be more reliable, self-reported data compare favorably with more objective data (e.g., employment records) and are an efficient and accurate way to collect data on illness-related work productivity loss ( 40 ). Third, we altered the standard 7-day recall period of the WPAI to 4 weeks for the reasons given above. A study that similarly extended the recall period to 4 weeks found that the construct validity of the modified questionnaire was similar to that of the original, though estimates of work productivity impairment were higher ( 24 ). Fourth, endometriosis was diagnosed visually, without histologic confirmation, following ESHRE guidelines ( 1 ), based on the premise that negative histology does not exclude the presence of disease. Although the hospitals were experienced in diagnosing endometriosis, disease stage might have been inadequately classified. However, combining minimal with mild and moderate with severe stages in analyses minimizes such potential bias. Furthermore, in a post-GSWH validation study, 29 surgeons from 12 of the 16 participating centers viewed nine standardized videos to identify/eliminate and stage endometriosis. Preliminary analysis suggested substantial interrater agreement in disease identification and staging (both Fleiss κ >0.60; unpublished data, by courtesy of Drs C. Becker and K. May, Oxford, U.K.).\nThe observation that 35.1% of women undergoing sterilization had endometriosis is not surprising, because rates of 3%–45% are reported in such women ( 41 ,  42 ). More surprising is that >50% of them had moderate/severe endometriosis, which may indicate that a relatively large proportion were not asymptomatic. Finally, the variability in both the range of endometriosis prevalence (34.8% in Oxford to 100% in Siena) and the proportion of moderate/severe disease (30%–40% in most centers but nearly 90% in some countries) may relate to a minority of participating centers routinely assessing women with presurgical ultrasound scans and prioritizing surgery in those with evidence of ovarian (endometriotic) cysts, but they may also reflect reality, because the proportion of moderate/severe endometriosis was reported as 63% in Iceland over a 20-year period ( 43 ). Although such differences in routine clinical protocols should be borne in mind when interpreting the results, additional adjustment of combined HRQoL and work productivity results according to center showed that key results were unaffected by any such differences.\nA key strength of our study was that, to limit information bias, we restricted our study to women undergoing a first laparoscopy for symptoms suggestive of endometriosis or sterilization and collected relevant data before diagnosis. Our results are therefore generalizable to this incident patient group but may underestimate HRQoL and work productivity figures among women who have suffered from the condition for longer.\nIn conclusion, endometriosis significantly affects women and societies world-wide, but substantial delays in diagnosis exist. Heightened awareness of the disease in primary care should lead to earlier diagnosis, less suffering, and improved work productivity. Future research should address the underlying pain mechanisms in endometriosis and identify symptom control strategies that target those pathways to improve the outlook for affected women.\n\nSUPPLEMENTAL FIGURE 1  Participating centers and numbers of women recruited in the Global Study of Women’s Health (n = 1,418).\nSUPPLEMENTAL FIGURE 2  Proportions of diagnostic endometriosis incidence and stage by center of recruitment. Others comprises Buenos Aires, Washington, DC, San Francisco, and Palo Alto.\nSUPPLEMENTAL FIGURE 3  Health-related quality of life in women with endometriosis (n = 745), symptomatic control women (n = 587), and laparoscopic sterilization control women (n = 86): SF36v2 component summary scores with adjusted  P  values and 95% confidence intervals. A lower score means lower health-related quality of life.  P  values are presented as ( P =x;  P =y), x being the  P  value for comparison of endometriosis and laparoscopic sterilization control subjects and y being the  P  value for comparison of endometriosis and symptomatic control subjects. Dashed line represents mean component summary score (50) for normative population. All  P  values are adjusted for site, education, marital status, employment status, pelvic pain severity, type and number of presenting symptoms, and comorbidity.\nSUPPLEMENTAL FIGURE 4  Absenteeism, presenteeism, and overall work productivity loss by endometriosis severity (Revised American Fertility Society classification [rAFS]). Adjusted  P  values for the association between each work productivity dimension and rAFS disease stage (trend test) are given. Variables adjusted for included educational attainment, marital status, type and number of symptoms, severity of pelvic pain, and comorbidity.\nSUPPLEMENTAL FIGURE 5  Monetary loss from endometriosis-associated work absenteeism and presenteeism.\nSUPPLEMENTAL TABLE 1  Factors (symptom patterns) and loading symptom variables.\nSUPPLEMENTAL TABLE 2  Care-seeking for symptoms, mean (SD).","source_license":"CC0","license_restricted":false}