The efficacy of Implanon for the treatment of chronic pelvic pain associated with pelvic congestion: 1-year randomized controlled pilot study

In: Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics · 2009 · vol. 280(3) , pp. 437–443 · doi:10.1007/s00404-009-0951-1 · PMID:19190927 · W2075360213
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AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06+body, 2026-06-09

This pilot study found that Implanon significantly reduced pelvic pain, menstrual blood loss, and objective venography scores in women with pelvic congestion syndrome compared to no treatment.

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The study evaluated the effects of the contraceptive subdermal implant Implanon on chronic pelvic pain in 25 women with pure pelvic congestion syndrome (PCS) using subjective pain scores (VAS/VRS), menstrual blood loss quantification (pictorial blood loss chart), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and objective pelvic venography, with diagnostic laparoscopy used to confirm “pure PCS.” After exclusion of 2 participants based on negative disease and HADS-related depression criteria, 23 women were randomly assigned to Implanon (n=12) versus no treatment (n=11) and followed through 12 months, with repeat venography at study end. Pain and menstrual blood loss improved more in the Implanon group than controls, and objective venography scores decreased significantly at 1 year; all Implanon users retained the implant, and satisfaction was mostly positive. The main limitation is the small, open-labelled pilot design with a control arm of no treatment. Relevance to endometriosis: the paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.

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Abstract

Objective To evaluate the beneficial effects of Implanon on pelvic pain in women with pelvic congestion syndrome (PCS). The efficacy of pain control, amount and frequency of menstrual loss, degree of patient’s satisfaction and objective pelvic venography scores were investigated.

Methods

In a prospective open-labelled study, 25 consecutive women complaining of chronic pelvic pain were recruited. Pretreatment objective peruterine venography and diagnostic laparoscopy of pure PCS together with subjective pelvic pain scores, prefilled questionnaire of Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), visual analogue scale (VAS), verbal rating scale (VRS) and quantified menstrual loss using the pictorial blood loss chart were documented in all cases. After identification, 23 subjects with pure PCS were randomly assigned to have either Implanon inserted subcutaneously (12 cases) or no treatment (11 cases). Patients were followed up at 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. A symptom diary for side effects, VAS, VRS and menstrual scores were used to assess the subjective response to treatment. At the end of the study, all patients underwent repeat venography to assess the long-term objective response. After 12 months, subjects having Implanon inserted were requested to rate their overall degree of satisfaction with therapy.

Results

All 25 women recruited in the study completed follow-up. Two cases were excluded from the study and referred to the psychiatry department after a negative evaluation for disease and HADS scores relevant for depression. An improvement in symptoms was observed throughout the 12 months amongst the Implanon group versus no treatment. The greatest changes in pain assessed using either the VAS or VRS were between the pretreatment scores and those after 6 months (7.7 ± 1.3 vs. 4.6 ± 3.0 for VAS, P < 0.001; and 25 ± 13.8 vs. 19 ± 18.9 for VRS, P < 0.002). The monthly quantified blood loss fell from 204 (196) pretreatment to 90 (157) at 6 months (P < 0.001) and then to 64 (32) at 9 months (P < 0.002). Objective repeat venography score was reduced significantly at 1 year after treatment compared with the baseline evaluation as well as with the control group (4.5 ± 1.2 vs. 8.6 ± 0.5; P = 0.001 and 4.2 ± 0.9 vs. 8.5 ± 0.6; P = 0.0002, respectively). At final satisfaction assessment, 2 (17%) women were very satisfied 8 (66%) were satisfied, and 2 (17%) were uncertain. The implant was retained by all women at the end of the study.

Conclusion

Implanon seems to be an effective hormonal alternative for long-term treatment of properly selected patients with pure PCS-related pelvic pain. Similar content being viewed by others Change history 01 August 2023 An Editorial Expression of Concern to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00404-023-07157-8

References

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